From: jjh@3do.com (Joel Hanes)
Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology
Subject: Law Bulletin Article on Whyte's Decision
Date: 17 Dec 1995 21:38:35 GMT
Message-ID: <4b22kr$i01@badger.3do.com>
Summary: Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, December 13, 1995, p. 6
Keywords: analysis copyright law


                          [Technology Law Column]

 Published in the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, December 13, 1995, at page 6.

 Reproduced by permission.

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               Internet Case Shows Copyright Act Needs Revision.
 
                        Copyright 1995 by David Loundy
 
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 As Congress contemplates proposed legislation to update the Copyright Act to
 better account for electronic publishing, courts are hearing cases which
 illustrate why such reform is necessary. (Unfortunately, as pointed out in
 my Oct. 12, 1995 Law Bulletin column, the reform needed is not the reform
 Congress is currently considering).
 
 One federal case at issue is Religious Technology Center v. Netcom On-Line
 Communications Services, Inc., No. C-95-20091 RMW, which is currently being
 heard in the Northern District of California by Judge Ronald M. Whyte. The
 case involves copyright liability for "conduit providers" who provide
 communication channels to connect users to the Internet.
 
 Plaintiffs Religious Technology Center ("RTC") and Bridge Publications, Inc.
 own the copyrights on the works of L. Ron Hubbard, science-fiction author
 and founder of the Church of Scientology. Dennis Erlich is a former minister
 of the Church of Scientology, who has become a critic of the Church. He's
 been posting Scientology's secret religious texts to newsgroups available on
 the Internet. Because these materials are copyrighted by RTC, Erlich is now
 a defendant in the case.
 
 Erlich gets his access to the Internet newsgroups by way of Tom Klemesrud's
 bulletin board system. Through this BBS, Erlich posts his messages to Usenet
 News, and can read others' messages, all of which are stored temporarily on
 the BBS.
 
 RTC asked Klemesrud to disconnect Erlich in order to stop Erlich's
 infringements. Klemesrud asked RTC for proof that they owned a copyright in
 the materials being posted by Erlich. RTC deemed this request unreasonable,
 and added Klemesrud as a defendant as well.
 
 Finally, RTC moved one link higher in the chain, and approached Netcom
 On-Line Communications Services, Inc., one of the nation's largest internet
 service providers, the organization that connects Klemesrud's BBS to the
 Internet. Netcom responded to RTC saying that it would be impossible to
 pre-screen Erlich's posts for copyright violations, and in order to kick
 Erlich off the Internet, it would be necessary to disconnect Klemesrud's BBS
 (and thus disconnect 500 or so other BBS users as well). Netcom's response
 also earned it a spot as a defendant.
 
 Judge Whyte's ruling (available on the Internet at
 http://www.cybercom.net/~rnewman/scientology/home.html) addresses the issues
 of direct, contributory, and vicarious liability on the part of the conduit
 providers-- Klemesrud and Netcom.
 
 To have a direct infringement of a copyrighted work, there must be an
 infringement of one of the copyright holder's exclusive rights (17 U.S.C.
 Section 501). At issue here is the exclusive right "to reproduce the
 copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords" (17 U.S.C. Section 106(1)). For
 a copy of a work to be made, the work must be "fixed" in a "tangible means
 of expression" from which it can be "perceived, reproduced, or otherwise
 communicated for a period of more than a transitory duration" (17 U.S.C.
 Section 101). The parties apparently do not contest that such copies exist
 on both Klemesrud's computer (which archives Usenet News posts for three
 days) or Netcom's computers (which archive Usenet News posts for eleven
 days).
 
 Copyright liability is a strict liability offense. There is no intent or
 knowledge requirement. Even innocent or accidental infringements may produce
 liability. See, e.g. DeAcosta v. Brown, 146 F.2d 408 (1944), cert. denied,
 325 U.S. 862 (1945).
 
 Reproductions of RTC's works were made on both Klemesrud's and Netcom's
 systems in the course of administering the Usenet News service. In fact, the
 works were distributed world-wide in a matter of hours. This is a result of
 the automatic functioning of Netcom's and Klemesrud's computers, as well as
 all of the other computers that work to distribute Usenet News posts over
 the Internet. An earlier decision in this case held that Erlich's posting of
 the copyright material was not likely to be a fair use of the the
 copyrighted works.
 
 Sounds like a slam-dunk win for the Scientologists on the direct
 infringement claim, right? Not according to Judge Whyte.
 
 Although the Judge recognized the strict-liability nature of copyright
 infringements, and that copies are being made by the defendants, he still
 refused to apply strict liability to find a direct infringement. As he put
 it:
 
      "Plaintiffs' theory would create many separate acts of
      infringement and, carried to its natural extreme, would lead to
      unreasonable liability. It is not difficult to conclude that
      Erlich infringes by copying a protected work onto his computer and
      by posting a message to a newsgroup. However, plaintiffs' theory
      further implicates a Usenet server that carries Erlich's message
      to other servers regardless of whether that server acts without
      any human intervention beyond the initial setting up of the
      system. It would also result in liability for every single Usenet
      server in the worldwide link of computers transmitting Erlich's
      message to every other computer." Slip Op. at 9.
 
 Even though direct liability without action on the part of the defendants'
 is repugnant to Judge Whyte, it is an interpretation the law currently
 allows. Furthermore, as the Judge even points out, it is what the Commerce
 Department's Information Infrastructure Task Force has decided is the proper
 result in exactly such cases, according to its final report on Intellectual
 Property Rights on the Information Superhighway.
 
 The issue revolves around who is responsible for the copies that are made
 automatically-- the system operator, who set up the system to make the
 copies, or the user who started the chain of events that produced the
 copies. One viewpoint says the system operator is making the copies on its
 machine, and should be liable.
 
 The other viewpoint says the situation is no different than an unattended
 photocopier-- the owner of the machine should not be held liable for
 infringing copies made on the machine.
 
 The potential direct liability under the first viewpoint is so wide-reaching
 that some people suggest that, with the rise of computer based
 communication, our whole intellectual property system is destined to
 collapse. See, John Perry Barlow, The Economy of Ideas: A Framework for
 Patents and Copyrights in the Digital Age. Wired, 2.03, Mar. 1994 at 89.
 Clearly a solution is needed, but none of the solutions proposed by Whyte,
 Barlow or the Commerce Department are satisfactory.
 
 Judge Whyte also examined whether either of the conduit providers may be
 held liable as contributory infringers. The standard for contributory
 copyright infringement is met when the defendant "with knowledge of the
 infringing activity, induces, causes or materially contributes to the
 infringing conduct of another." Gershwin Publishing Corp. v. Columbia
 Artists Management, Inc., 443 F.2d 1159, 1162 (2d Cir., 1971).
 
 The judge found no question that the defendants aided the distribution of
 the copyrighted material posted by Erlich. However, Whyte held that there
 was a question of fact as to whether the defendants had the requisite
 knowledge of the infringement. While noting that just a claim of
 infringement is not automatically enough to put a defendant on notice, the
 defendants did not even look at Erlich's messages when RTC informed the
 defendants of the post's infringing nature. Importantly, the court held
 that:
 
      "[w]here a BBS operator cannot reasonably verify a claim of
      infringement, either because of a possible fair use defense, the
      lack of copyright notices on the copies, or the copyright holder's
      failure to provide the necessary documentation to show that there
      is a likely infringement, the operator's lack of knowledge will be
      found reasonable and there will be no liability for contributory
      infringement for allowing the continued distribution of works on
      its system." Slip Op. at 17.
 
 If a fact-finder agrees that there is no liability in such a situation, many
 system operators will live much happier lives as a result.
 
 Even without knowledge, a conduit provider may still be vicariously liable
 for copyright infringements. Here the analysis really gets ugly and too long
 to be handled in this article (due to conflicting case holdings on similar
 facts, among other things).
 
 In short, a vicarious infringer is one who has (1) the right and ability to
 control the infringer's acts, and (2) receives a direct financial benefit
 from the infringement. Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. v. H. L. Green Co., 316 F.2d
 304, 306 (2d Cir. 1963).
 
 The vicarious liability claim failed against Klemesrud, due to a lack of
 proof of Klemesrud's ability to control Erlich's actions. Judge Whyte held
 that there was a question over Netcom's ability to control Erlich's
 infringing, due to Netcom's terms of service contract between Netcom and its
 subscribers (Klemesrud) which allowed Netcom the right to take remedial
 action against subscribers.
 
 The sticking point was the second issue-- did Netcom receive a direct
 financial benefit from the infringement? Here, rather than looking at the
 theory underlying vicarious liability (that the innocent author should not
 loose out when someone else is either more liable or is otherwise in a
 better position to insure against infringement), the Court simply picked its
 favorite of the conflicting cases to justify its result, and found no
 financial benefit.
 
 This case raises some important issues-- issues that are of grave concern to
 a growing number of individuals and businesses. It shows up some of the
 weaknesses in the current Copyright Act. Judge Whyte's opinion addresses one
 weakness, but leaves open questions of interpretation. Hopefully congress
 will take the hints it offers, and will send the Commerce Department back to
 the drawing-board in order to come up with some more appropriate proposals
 to amend the Copyright Act.
