BWP Media U.S. Inc. v. Polyvore, Inc.
This text of 922 F.3d 42 (BWP Media U.S. Inc. v. Polyvore, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Per Curiam:
*44BWP Media USA Inc., Pacific Coast News, and National Photo Group, LLC (collectively "BWP") appeal from a memorandum and order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Ronnie Abrams, J. ) that granted summary judgment to Polyvore, Inc. ("Polyvore") on BWP's copyright claims for direct and secondary infringement and denied BWP's cross-motion for summary judgment on direct infringement. The district court also denied Polyvore's motion for sanctions under
We conclude that the district court's grant of summary judgment to Polyvore on the direct infringement claim was error because there is a dispute of material fact regarding whether Polyvore created multiple copies of BWP's photos that were not requested by Polyvore users. We further conclude that questions of material fact preclude us from holding at this stage that Polyvore satisfied the requirements for the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) § 512(c) safe harbor, even though BWP has not shown that Polyvore's stripping of metadata disqualifies it from safe harbor protection. We agree with the district court, however, that Polyvore is entitled to summary judgment on BWP's secondary infringement claims of contributory, vicarious, and inducement of infringement because the district court found that BWP abandoned those claims. And we find no error in the district court's decision not to sanction BWP. We therefore AFFIRM the district court's grant of summary judgment dismissing BWP's secondary infringement claims, AFFIRM the denial of attorney's fees, VACATE the judgment as to direct infringement, and REMAND for further proceedings pursuant to the principles and procedures set out United States v. Jacobson ,
The facts are set forth in Judge Walker's separate concurring opinion, which also specifies the questions of material fact that remain for determination by the district court. Judge Newman concurs in the result with a separate opinion. Judge Pooler concurs in the result with a separate opinion.
John M. Walker, Jr., Circuit Judge, concurring in the result.
I write separately to set out the facts and questions of material fact that remain for determination by the district court, as well as to describe my reasoning regarding each of our conclusions.
BACKGROUND
The following facts are undisputed. Defendant-appellee Polyvore is an internet service provider that ran a website, Polyvore.com, that allowed users to create and share digital photo collages devoted to fashion, art, and design.1 Polyvore.com's *45"Clipper" tool let users "clip" images from other websites and collect them on Polyvore's site. Once a user clipped an image, they could store, modify, crop, or superimpose it on top of other images to make a digital photo collage, which Polyvore called a "set." Users could share their sets with other Polyvore users, comment on other users' sets, and submit their sets in contests to win prizes. At the time this suit was filed, Polyvore's website attracted 14.2 million visitors a month.
When a user uploaded an image to Polyvore.com, it triggered a series of automatic technical processes: Polyvore (1) attached a hyperlink to that image that linked back to the image's original site; (2) gave the image a unique Uniform Resource Locator ("URL") that identified its precise location on Polyvore's website, Polyvore.com; and (3) indexed the photo so it was searchable on Polyvore.com. All posted images were displayed automatically by software-meaning Polyvore employees did not review or interact with user-posted images before they appeared on the site. Based on these user uploads, Polyvore.com had an extensive library of searchable images-118 million when the complaint was filed.
Because some photos clipped by users were copyrighted images, Polyvore had policies in place that were designed to combat copyright infringement, including terms of service that prohibited users from posting copyrighted images, a repeat-infringer policy, and a notice-and-takedown system.
BWP owns copyrights in celebrity photographs, which it licenses to online and print publications for a fee. At issue in this case are at least seventy-nine of BWP's photographs that appeared on Polyvore.com without BWP's permission.2 The images include photos of celebrities such as McKayla Maroney, Carly Rae Jepsen, Ryan Gosling, Kim Kardashian, and Selena Gomez. In November 2013, BWP sued Polyvore for copyright infringement alleging that Polyvore's posting of the photos violated BWP's exclusive rights under the Copyright Act to reproduce and display its images publicly. See
As part of discovery, BWP produced a document containing the URLs and upload dates of the images at issue, as well as screenshots showing its images displayed on Polyvore's website; Polyvore served initial disclosures and identified witnesses with knowledge about facts alleged in the complaint. Because the software programs most relevant to BWP's claims were highly technical, the parties agreed that instead of producing code, Polyvore would make available witnesses who could be deposed *46about the site's design and functionality. During the seven-month discovery period, however, BWP never took a single deposition. With the record therefore essentially the same as it had been before discovery, Polyvore moved for summary judgment, arguing that BWP had not substantiated its direct or secondary liability claims.
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Per Curiam:
*44BWP Media USA Inc., Pacific Coast News, and National Photo Group, LLC (collectively "BWP") appeal from a memorandum and order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Ronnie Abrams, J. ) that granted summary judgment to Polyvore, Inc. ("Polyvore") on BWP's copyright claims for direct and secondary infringement and denied BWP's cross-motion for summary judgment on direct infringement. The district court also denied Polyvore's motion for sanctions under
We conclude that the district court's grant of summary judgment to Polyvore on the direct infringement claim was error because there is a dispute of material fact regarding whether Polyvore created multiple copies of BWP's photos that were not requested by Polyvore users. We further conclude that questions of material fact preclude us from holding at this stage that Polyvore satisfied the requirements for the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) § 512(c) safe harbor, even though BWP has not shown that Polyvore's stripping of metadata disqualifies it from safe harbor protection. We agree with the district court, however, that Polyvore is entitled to summary judgment on BWP's secondary infringement claims of contributory, vicarious, and inducement of infringement because the district court found that BWP abandoned those claims. And we find no error in the district court's decision not to sanction BWP. We therefore AFFIRM the district court's grant of summary judgment dismissing BWP's secondary infringement claims, AFFIRM the denial of attorney's fees, VACATE the judgment as to direct infringement, and REMAND for further proceedings pursuant to the principles and procedures set out United States v. Jacobson ,
The facts are set forth in Judge Walker's separate concurring opinion, which also specifies the questions of material fact that remain for determination by the district court. Judge Newman concurs in the result with a separate opinion. Judge Pooler concurs in the result with a separate opinion.
John M. Walker, Jr., Circuit Judge, concurring in the result.
I write separately to set out the facts and questions of material fact that remain for determination by the district court, as well as to describe my reasoning regarding each of our conclusions.
BACKGROUND
The following facts are undisputed. Defendant-appellee Polyvore is an internet service provider that ran a website, Polyvore.com, that allowed users to create and share digital photo collages devoted to fashion, art, and design.1 Polyvore.com's *45"Clipper" tool let users "clip" images from other websites and collect them on Polyvore's site. Once a user clipped an image, they could store, modify, crop, or superimpose it on top of other images to make a digital photo collage, which Polyvore called a "set." Users could share their sets with other Polyvore users, comment on other users' sets, and submit their sets in contests to win prizes. At the time this suit was filed, Polyvore's website attracted 14.2 million visitors a month.
When a user uploaded an image to Polyvore.com, it triggered a series of automatic technical processes: Polyvore (1) attached a hyperlink to that image that linked back to the image's original site; (2) gave the image a unique Uniform Resource Locator ("URL") that identified its precise location on Polyvore's website, Polyvore.com; and (3) indexed the photo so it was searchable on Polyvore.com. All posted images were displayed automatically by software-meaning Polyvore employees did not review or interact with user-posted images before they appeared on the site. Based on these user uploads, Polyvore.com had an extensive library of searchable images-118 million when the complaint was filed.
Because some photos clipped by users were copyrighted images, Polyvore had policies in place that were designed to combat copyright infringement, including terms of service that prohibited users from posting copyrighted images, a repeat-infringer policy, and a notice-and-takedown system.
BWP owns copyrights in celebrity photographs, which it licenses to online and print publications for a fee. At issue in this case are at least seventy-nine of BWP's photographs that appeared on Polyvore.com without BWP's permission.2 The images include photos of celebrities such as McKayla Maroney, Carly Rae Jepsen, Ryan Gosling, Kim Kardashian, and Selena Gomez. In November 2013, BWP sued Polyvore for copyright infringement alleging that Polyvore's posting of the photos violated BWP's exclusive rights under the Copyright Act to reproduce and display its images publicly. See
As part of discovery, BWP produced a document containing the URLs and upload dates of the images at issue, as well as screenshots showing its images displayed on Polyvore's website; Polyvore served initial disclosures and identified witnesses with knowledge about facts alleged in the complaint. Because the software programs most relevant to BWP's claims were highly technical, the parties agreed that instead of producing code, Polyvore would make available witnesses who could be deposed *46about the site's design and functionality. During the seven-month discovery period, however, BWP never took a single deposition. With the record therefore essentially the same as it had been before discovery, Polyvore moved for summary judgment, arguing that BWP had not substantiated its direct or secondary liability claims.
In its opposition to that motion, BWP argued that Polyvore was not entitled to summary judgment on its direct infringement claims because Polyvore itself (1) copied, stored, and displayed BWP's images, and (2) interfered with a "standard technical measure" by stripping metadata from BWP's images, therefore disqualifying it from the protection of the safe harbor provisions of the DMCA which deny protection to ISPs that interfere with measures "used by copyright owners to identify or protect copyrighted works."
To support its claims, BWP attached to its motion for summary judgment a spreadsheet prepared by BWP's counsel listing eighty-five different images that appeared on Polyvore's website stripped of their metadata. The spreadsheet also included nine separate Polyvore URLs for each image-an original link and then a link to the same image reproduced in eight different sizes, "e," "g," "l," "m," "s," "t," "x," and "y." None of the images that the spreadsheet listed as having been copied nine times (including the original clipped image), however, were images at issue in this case. Relying on the evidence of the additional URLs, BWP cross-moved for summary judgment on direct infringement, arguing that Polyvore's copying and display of BWP's images "separate and apart" from the images its users clipped established direct infringement as a matter of law.
After finding no evidence that Polyvore acted volitionally, the district court granted Polyvore's motion for summary judgment on all claims, denied BWP's motion for summary judgment on its direct infringement claim, and denied Polyvore's request for fees. Because the district court found no infringing conduct, it did not address Polyvore's safe harbor defense under the DMCA. BWP appealed, and Polyvore cross-appealed.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, BWP principally argues that (1) Polyvore directly infringed its copyrights by designing the Clipper to retrieve photos from other websites, displaying BWP's images at the request of users, and making and displaying multiple, unrequested copies of user-uploaded images; and (2) the DMCA does not shield Polyvore from its own directly infringing acts, or any of its other acts, because Polyvore altered the metadata of user-uploaded images and because some of the infringing conduct was directed by Polyvore, not its users.3
We review a district court's grant of summary judgment de novo .
*47Baldwin v. EMI Feist Catalog, Inc. ,
I. Direct Infringement
The district court granted summary judgment for Polyvore on BWP's direct infringement claims. Applying Cartoon Network LP, LLLP v. CSC Holdings, Inc. ,
A. The Volitional Conduct Requirement
Section 106 of the Copyright Act gives copyright holders an exclusive bundle of rights, including the right "to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies," and the right to "display the copyrighted work publicly."
The advent of the internet posed a problem for this regime, however, since applying strict liability to infringing content posted online meant that websites could be held liable for infringing content posted by their users based solely on the existence of the website-an outcome that could be unfair. See, e.g. , Religious Tech. Ctr. v. Netcom On-Line Commc'n Servs., Inc. ,
*48Ten years ago in Cablevision , we adopted the volitional conduct requirement in this circuit as a prerequisite to establishing copyright infringement liability for service providers, holding that "volitional conduct is an important element of direct liability."
Subsequently, in Aereo , we considered a direct copyright infringement claim brought by holders of copyrights in broadcast television programs against Aereo, Inc., whose service allowed subscribers to watch television programs over the internet at virtually the same time as the program was broadcast. See WNET, Thirteen v. Aereo, Inc. ,
The Supreme Court reversed on grounds unrelated to whether Aereo's conduct was volitional. Aereo ,
In dissent, Justice Scalia, joined by Justices Thomas and Alito, applied a volitional conduct analysis, stating that "[t]he Networks' claim is governed by a simple but *49profoundly important rule: A defendant may be held directly liable only if it has engaged in volitional conduct that violates the [Copyright] Act." Id. at 453,
BWP reads into the majority's silence on volitional conduct in Aereo a declaration that the volitional conduct requirement is dead. I disagree. First, it is plain that Aereo , as viewed by the majority, is confined to the discrete area of television rebroadcasting, which explains both the absence of the majority's discussion of volitional conduct and Aereo 's inapplicability to the case before us. Second, we have reaffirmed post- Aereo (albeit without discussing Aereo ) that "[v]olitional conduct is an important element of direct liability." MP3tunes ,
With this background, I turn to the question of whether either party is entitled to summary judgment on direct infringement.
B. Whether Polyvore Acted Volitionally
The district court granted summary judgment to Polyvore, dismissing BWP's direct infringement claim. Notwithstanding a dispute about whether Polyvore made additional unrequested copies of BWP's images, the district court found that Polyvore did not act volitionally by designing the Clipper or copying BWP's images because (1) the images appeared on Polyvore's site without affirmative acts by Polyvore employees and (2) there was no evidence that the Clipper was designed specifically to infringe. I agree with the district court that Polyvore did not act volitionally when it designed the Clipper and made one copy of user-uploaded images belonging to BWP, but I disagree about the materiality of the additional images. After reviewing the record de novo , Baldwin ,
An ISP acts volitionally when it creates a program designed to infringe copyrighted material and selects the copyrighted material that it copies. See MP3tunes ,
In contrast, the volitional conduct requirement is not satisfied when an ISP simply displays user-uploaded images and plays no role in selecting the images.7 See, e.g. , MP3tunes ,
Likewise, an ISP does not act volitionally when it automatically makes a single copy of content selected by the user in response to a user's request. See Cablevision ,
ISPs that provide additional unrequested copies of copyrighted material in response to a user's request for a single copy, however, may be liable for direct *51infringement. See MP3tunes ,
In this case, there is no evidence that Polyvore designed the Clipper to retrieve exclusively a specific kind of image that Polyvore knew to be copyrighted. Instead, the evidence shows that Polyvore designed a tool that its users could use to clip images generally, whether copyrighted or not. Thus the single act of designing the Clipper does not amount to volitional conduct that can be said to "cause[ ] the copy to be made" each time its users selected the image and used the Clipper to create a single copy of the image. Cablevision ,
Likewise, the undisputed record in this case shows that one copy of user-uploaded images on Polyvore's website was displayed automatically by Polyvore's software. Like the defendant ISP in CoStar , Polyvore simply served as a "conduit[ ]" that allowed the user to display his clipped images.
There is evidence in the record, however, that after a user clipped one of BWP's images, Polyvore made further copies that the user did not request. The spreadsheet prepared by BWP's counsel listing eighty-five different images that appeared on Polyvore's website shows that for at least some images that users uploaded to Polyvore, additional copies of the same images appeared in varying sizes at distinct URLs.8 Although this spreadsheet does not list images at issue in this case, it does provide circumstantial evidence from which a reasonable juror could infer that BWP's images, which appeared on Polyvore's website only two years earlier, were *52also copied in the same way. Drawing all inferences in favor of BWP, as we must, I conclude that BWP has met its burden of raising an issue of material fact as to whether Polyvore made additional unrequested copies of BWP's copyrighted images. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc. ,
This dispute is material because, assuming the jury finds that BWP's images were in fact copied multiple times, Polyvore's copying, like the copying in MP3tunes , was triggered regardless of whether the user knew about, let alone asked for, the additional images. See
C. Judge Newman's Concurring Opinion
In his concurring opinion, Judge Newman argues that the volitional conduct requirement should be understood as a causation requirement. I disagree with this approach for several reasons.
First, it seems to me that volition and causation are different concepts. Importantly, what Judge Newman refers to when he discusses causation is not "but for" causation, but rather "proximate" causation. Proximate causation is a negligence concept that has to do with risk and foreseeability. See RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: PHYS. & EMOT. HARM § 29 (2010) ("An actor's liability is limited to those harms that result from the risks that made the actor's conduct tortious."). Volition, on the other hand, is "[t]he act of making a choice or determining something." VOLITION, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). In the context of direct copyright infringement, volition "is choosing to engage in an act that causes infringement." 3 PATRY ON COPYRIGHT § 9:5.50 (emphasis added). Therefore, although a volition analysis may under certain circumstances require an explicit causation analysis, and although applying only a causation analysis to particular facts may yield the same result as a volition analysis, volition is not the same thing as causation. When the district court in Netcom referred to "volition or causation" in stating how direct liability might be limited "where a defendant's system is merely used to create a copy by a third party,"
*53I also have serious reservations about applying a proximate causation analysis to the question of direct infringement. First, volition has textual underpinnings in the Copyright Act, whereas proximate causation does not. See Aereo ,
Finally, it is important to remember that direct liability is not the only avenue for recovery against an ISP for copyright infringement. Secondary liability exists precisely to impose liability on defendants who, while not directly responsible for infringing conduct, still should be held liable. Direct liability "applies when an actor personally engages in infringing conduct." Aereo ,
One might conclude from reading Judge Newman's concurring opinion that the only kind of copyright liability is direct liability. But the concerns that motivate his desire to hold ISPs liable for infringing conduct under direct liability are addressed by the existence of secondary liability. And the existence of these two types of liability supports the volitional conduct requirement.
*54As Justice Scalia stated in his Aereo dissent, "[t]he distinction between direct and secondary liability would collapse if there were not a clear rule for determining whether the defendant committed the infringing act. The volitional-conduct requirement supplies that rule; its purpose is not to excuse defendants from accountability, but to channel the claims against them into the correct analytical track." Aereo ,
It is true that secondary liability is no longer at issue in this case because BWP has abandoned that claim. But BWP's abandonment of its secondary liability claim is no reason to try to shoe-horn what should be that claim into a direct liability claim or to confuse the concept of volition in determining direct liability by equating it to proximate causation.
II. DMCA Safe Harbor
Polyvore next argues that even if a jury could find that it directly infringed BWP's exclusive rights to display and reproduce its copyrighted images, Polyvore cannot be held liable for direct infringement because it qualifies for the safe harbor of § 512(c) found in Title II of the DMCA.
Congress passed Title II of the DMCA in 1998 to "clarify the liability faced by service providers who transmit potentially infringing material over their networks." Viacom Int'l, Inc. v. YouTube, Inc. ,
The section at issue here, 512(c), provides:
A service provider shall not be liable ... for infringement of copyright by reason of the storage at the direction of a user of material that resides on a system or network controlled or operated by or for the service provider, if the service provider-
(A)(i) does not have actual knowledge that the material or an activity using the material on the system or network is infringing; (ii) in the absence of such actual knowledge, is not aware of facts or circumstances from which infringing activity is apparent; or (iii) upon obtaining such knowledge or awareness, acts expeditiously to remove, or disable access to, the material;
(B) does not receive a financial benefit directly attributable to the infringing activity, in a case in which the service provider has the right and ability to control such activity; and
(C) upon notification of claimed infringement as described in paragraph (3), responds expeditiously to remove, or disable access to, the material that is claimed to be infringing or to be the subject of infringing activity.
Polyvore argues it has satisfied all of these requirements for the DMCA safe harbor of § 512(c) because the undisputed record shows that at the time of the conduct alleged: (1) Polyvore was an ISP, (2) Polyvore registered an agent to receive take-down notices and remove infringing content, (3) Polyvore had a repeat infringer policy, (4) the infringing images were initially uploaded by users, and (5) Polyvore had no actual or "red flag knowledge" that any of BWP's images uploaded by users were copyrighted.
In response, BWP argues that Polyvore is not eligible for any safe harbor under the DMCA because (1) by altering the metadata of images uploaded to its site it interfered with "standard technical measures" in contravention of § 512(i), and (2) the copying of the additional images was not infringement "at the direction of the user." Appellant's Br. at 41. I agree with Polyvore that BWP has not raised an issue of material fact as to whether preserving metadata is a "standard technical measure," but other questions of material fact still prevent me from saying that Polyvore has shown that the copying here was done "at the direction of the user."
A. Metadata as a standard technical measure
Because the district court held that Polyvore's conduct was not infringing, it did not address whether Polyvore's stripping of metadata interfered impermissibly with "standard technical measures" such that Polyvore was not eligible for the DMCA safe harbor.
The DMCA defines "standard technical measures" as "technical measures that are used by copyright owners to identify or protect copyrighted works."
The caselaw provides little guidance on how to know when a widely followed practice has evolved into a "standard technical measure." See Perfect 10, Inc. v. CCBill LLC ,
*56Gardner v. CafePress Inc. ,
I need not expound upon what may or may not constitute a "standard technical measure" because BWP has not come close to establishing that there is a broad consensus among copyright owners and service providers that preserving metadata should be so considered.9 BWP's primary "evidence" is a single document attached as an exhibit to its opposition to summary judgment entitled "Guidelines for Handling Image Metadata," authored by the Metadata Working Group, which is made up of representatives from Adobe, Apple, Canon, Microsoft, Nokia, and Sony. Dkt. 85-2 at 2. This document is wholly deficient in establishing that preserving metadata is "standard." First, representatives from these six software and hardware companies do not constitute a "broad consensus" of "copyright owners and service providers."
Alternatively, BWP argues that because courts interpreting
More broadly, Congress did not leave it to the courts to simply pronounce out of thin air that a given technical measure has become a "standard" in the industry such that interfering with it prevents an ISP from claiming the protection of the § 512(c) safe harbors. It is plain from § 512(i) itself that such a pronouncement can only come from "a broad consensus of copyright owners and service providers in an open, fair, voluntary, multi-industry standards process."
B. Storage "at the direction of a user"
"The § 512(c) safe harbor is only available when the infringement occurs 'by reason of the storage at the direction of a user of material that resides on a system or network controlled or operated by or *58for the service provider.' " Viacom ,
BWP argues in passing that Polyvore is ineligible for the § 512(c) safe harbor protections because Polyvore, not its users, made the infringing additional copies, thereby disqualifying Polyvore from the safe harbor for copying done "at the direction of a user."
Making copies of user-uploaded materials solely to facilitate user access does not disqualify an ISP from availing itself of the § 512(c) safe harbor. For example, in Viacom , we held that YouTube had met the requirements of the § 512(c) safe harbor even though it had converted or "transcoded" videos its users uploaded into a standard display format.
There is a question of material fact as to whether Polyvore's additional copies were made solely to facilitate access by users. Polyvore, as the party with the burden to prove its affirmative defense, see Columbia Pictures , 710 F.3d at 1039, has not pointed to evidence in the record that shows, assuming these copies were made, why they were made at all.12 Without facts in the record about the purpose and function of these additional copies, I am unable to determine whether the copies here were made to "render" user-uploaded content "viewable over the Internet to most users." Viacom ,
On the current incomplete record, Polyvore appears to resemble the defendants *59in Viacom and UMG in some ways, but not in others. For example, like the defendants in Viacom and UMG , Polyvore is alleged to have made, unbeknownst to its users, multiple copies of user-uploaded images. See Viacom ,
III. Attorney's Fees
Polyvore's sole argument in its cross-appeal is that because of BWP's history of aggressively filing cases that it fails to prosecute, the district court abused its discretion by declining to award Polyvore fees under
However, notwithstanding the district court's denial of legal fees, I cannot let pass my concern over BWP's record of aggressive litigation, which entails filing hundreds of lawsuits directed at ISPs without even attempting to substantiate its claims in discovery. See BWP Media USA Inc. v. Rich Kids Clothing Co. , LLC,
Jon O. Newman, Circuit Judge, concurring in the result.
The ultimate issue on this appeal, of increasing importance in the age of digital transmissions, concerns the circumstances under which a developer or operator of a computer system or program, activated by its customers, can be liable for direct infringement of a copyright. Now that the District Court, pursuant to our interim remand,1 has ruled that the claims of secondary liability for infringement in this case have been abandoned,2 the issue of liability for direct infringement, and only that issue, is before us. For that reason I express no views on the possibility that defendant Polyvore, Inc. might have been found secondarily liable for infringement.
*61However, as Judge Walker's opinion points out, before the direct infringement claim can properly be resolved, a remand is needed for District Court factfinding on two issues: first, whether, from the fact that Polyvore made multiple copies of 85 images for which plaintiff BWP Media USA Inc. ("BWP") holds a copyright, it is inferable that Polyvore also made multiple copies of the nine copyrighted images at issue in this case; second, whether additional copies of the copyrighted images were made solely to facilitate access by users so as to accord Polyvore the safe harbor protection of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act,
I. Evolution of the volition requirement
Because the District Court rejected BWP's claim of direct infringement on the ground that Polyvore had not acted with the "volition" required for direct copyright infringement liability, see BWP Media USA Inc v. Polyvore, Inc. , No. 13-CV-7867(RA),
The first articulation of a volitional conduct as a requirement for direct infringement of copyright occurred in Religious Technology Center v. Netcom On-Line Communication Services, Inc .,
Preliminarily, I note that it is unlikely that Judge Whyte used the word "element" to mean a legally required element of an infringement claim. Numerous cases have long established that an infringement claim has only two elements - "(1) ownership of a valid copyright, and (2) copying of constituent elements of the work that are original." Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co. ,
An initial issue posed by Netcom 's "volition or causation" phrase is whether the words "volition" and "causation" are synonyms or alternatives. Long before Netcom , there was no doubt that when the identity of a person liable for direct infringement was disputed, it was necessary to prove who caused the infringement. Infringement is a tort, as this Court long ago recognized, see American Code Co. v. Bensinger ,
Volition, that is, causation, is widely accepted as a requirement for direct infringement liability. "[E]very circuit to address this issue has adopted some version of Netcom 's reasoning and the volitional-conduct requirement." BWP Media USA, Inc. v. T&S Software Associates, Inc. ,
*63Leonard v. Stemtech International Inc. ,
The Supreme Court's first intimation of any thoughts concerning causation as a fact relevant to an infringement claim in the digital age was Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc. ,
Looking to patent law, the Court enlisted the "staple article of commerce" doctrine, insulating from contributory infringement the seller of a "staple article or commodity of commerce suitable for substantial noninfringing use ," Sony ,
This was not an entirely satisfactory standard because any copying equipment capable of copying copyrighted materials is also capable of copying public domain materials. But the holding of Sony (more important than the opinion's language, as is true of all decisions) is entirely defensible. There was evidence that many producers of copyrighted video programs favored time-shifting in order to expand their viewing audience. See id . at 424,
The next significant development concerning volition/causation was the emergence of the bill that, in a modified form, became the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act in 1998, Pub. L. 105-304, tit. II, § 202(a),
Pertinent to the law of this Circuit, the next development concerning volition/causation was the decision of this Court in Cartoon Network . The holding was unexceptional. At issue was a proposed remote storage digital video recorder ("RS-DVR") system, permitting TV viewers "to record cable programming on central hard drives housed and maintained by Cablevision at a 'remote' location" and "then receive playback of those programs through their home television sets, using only a remote control and a standard cable box equipped with the RS-DVR software." Cartoon Network ,
I agree with that holding because, for me, Cartoon Network , like Sony before it, is ultimately about time-shifting, and it should not matter whether the viewer's recorded copy resides in a Betamax VTR device on top of a TV set or in the remote server of the Cablevision company. Although the opinion in Cartoon Network never mentions time-shifting, it described Cablevision's technology as "akin" to "traditional set-top digital_video recorders,"
However, there is language in Cartoon Network that I question: "In determining who actually 'makes' a copy, a significant difference exists between making a request to a human employee , who then *65volitionally operates the copying system to make the copy, and issuing a command directly to a system, which automatically obeys commands and engages in no volitional conduct." Id . at 131 (emphasis added). I agree there is a difference, but the stark alternatives posed by this sentence create the risk that it will be overread to mean that only a human being who operates a copying system, for example, in a copy shop,10 can satisfy the volition/causation requirement and render the copy shop liable for infringement, and that the person or entity that designs and or operates a system that makes one or more copies when it "automatically obeys commands" cannot be liable for infringement.11 I am satisfied, however, that Cartoon Network did not intend to preclude infringement liability for all developers or operators of systems that automatically make copies upon an individual's command. The Cartoon Network opinion explicitly identified and left open the question "whether one's contribution to the creation of an infringing copy may be so great that it warrants holding that party directly liable for the infringement, even though another party has actually made the copy."
The risk that our Court would insulate from liability many developers or operators of systems that automatically caused an infringement at another person's command came close to fruition in a challenge to a system that allowed subscribers, for a fee, to watch over-the-air TV programs. A District Court denied a preliminary injunction against the operator of the system in light of Cartoon Network . See Broadcasting Cos. v. Aereo, Inc. ,
The risk lessened, however, when the Supreme Court reversed Aereo II . See American Broadcasting Cos. v. Aereo, Inc. ,
II. Volition as Causation
Once volitional conduct is understood as essentially concerning causation, the issue becomes how the concept of causation applies in the context of alleged direct infringement of copyright arising from use of a defendant's system or program that automatically makes copies of copyrighted images at a keystroke by a defendant's customer. Consideration of that issue begins with general principles of causation in tort law. "For harm resulting to a third person from the tortious conduct of another, one is subject to liability if he ... knows that the other's conduct constitutes a breach of duty and gives substantial assistance or encouragement to the other so to conduct himself." RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 876(b) ("Restatement"). "For harm resulting to a third person from the tortious conduct of another, one is subject to liability if he ... permits the other to act ... with his instrumentalities, knowing or having reason to know that the other is acting or will act tortiously." Id . § 877(c).
Pertinent to the possible infringement liability of the operator of a system that facilitates automatic copying, the legislative history of the 1976 Copyright Act recognized that "where the work was infringed by two or more tort feasors [sic ], the bill would make them jointly and severally liable."12 "There is no rule of copyright law that would preclude the imposition of direct liability on both parties [i.e ., the system operator and the user]." Denicola, supra , 37 Cardozo L. Rev. at 1273.13
However, tort law principles of causation do not necessarily apply in the copyright field exactly as they apply with respect to torts generally or joint tortfeasor liability in particular. In addition to assuring protection for the rights of copyright owners in order to promote creativity, copyright law, especially in the digital age, must avoid such an expansive regime of protection that developers of computer programs and system operators are unduly deterred from making socially useful contributions to widespread access to information.
The caselaw has not yet developed clear principles for determining when the developer or operator of a system, activated automatically by a user, is jointly liable with the user for direct infringement. The Fourth Circuit hinted at a generalized approach for making such a determination when it observed that the Copyright Act creates liability for "a person who causes in some meaningful way an infringement." CoStar Group v. LoopNet, Inc. ,
III. Judge Walker's Opinion
With these thoughts in mind, I now consider Judge Walker's opinion in the pending appeal. I fully agree with many portions of that opinion. Specifically, I agree that the requirement of volitional conduct must be shown when there is dispute as to which party or parties caused a direct infringement and that Aereo III did not abrogate the requirement of such conduct. I also agree that the copy shop example, which Judge Walker's opinion mentions, illustrates one situation where volitional/causation conduct is not present, at least as long as the copy shop merely permits its customers themselves to use copying machines on the shop's premises. But care must be taken not to generalize from that example. That a copy shop is not liable for direct infringement when its customer makes a copy on a shop's copying machine does not mean that all developers and operators of programs and systems are equally immune from such liability just because the customer selects the item to be copied and accomplishes the copying at a keystroke without any intervention by an employee of the developer or operator.
I disagree with Judge Walker's opinion when it appears to indicate that all developers or operators of systems that make copies, at a customer's keystroke command, of copyrighted materials selected by the customer should be insulated from direct liability for infringement. Selection by the customer may well be relevant to determining whether system developers or operators share direct liability with a customer, but is not necessarily determinative.14 In any event, there is no need to make any definitive ruling on the significance of selection at this stage of the pending litigation.
I agree with Judge Walker when he says that "[a]n ISP acts volitionally when it creates a program designed to infringe copyrighted material," but I reject the arguable implication of this language that an ISP acts volitionally only when it creates a program designed to infringe copyrighted material. Judge Walker's opinion cites EMI Christian Music Group, Inc. v. MP3tunes, LLC ,
I do not entirely agree with Judge Walker when he says, again citing MP3tunes , that "the volitional conduct requirement is not satisfied when an ISP simply displays user-uploaded images."17 This statement is no doubt true in some circumstances but not necessarily true in all circumstances. For example, in Capitol Records, LLC v. ReDigi Inc. ,
Finally, I do not agree with Judge Walker's conclusion that "Polyvore cannot be liable for direct copyright infringement for designing the Clipper[18 ] to simply retrieve photos picked out by users from other websites (before Polyvore makes other copies)." In view of the remand for further factfinding, which our judgment orders, it is at least premature to rule at this point whether Polyvore can be liable for designing the Clipper, and such a ruling might be incorrect. It is arguable that Polyvore has given "substantial assistance," Restatement § 876(b), to its customers to make copies of copyrighted photographs and has permitted its customers to act with its "instrumentalities," id . § 877(c) knowing that they "will act tortiously,"
With these reservations, I concur in the result.
Rosemary S. Pooler, Circuit Judge, concurring in the result.
I concur in the result but write separately to emphasize the context and consequences of this case. To this effect, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, as amicus curiae, urges that such a website design as Polyvore's a) automatically generates copies of images in different sizes to allow users to view the images on various devices, and b) is "routine" and "very common [among] Internet technologies." Amicus Br. at 13-14, Dkt. No. 87.
Regardless whether the volitional conduct requirement is properly understood as a causation requirement, as Judge Newman urges and Judge Walker disputes, the question will boil down to whether Polyvore is sufficiently tied to the act of copying for direct infringement liability to attach. Accordingly, I have strong line-drawing concerns with Judge Walker's framing of volitional conduct: "an ISP does not act volitionally when it automatically makes a single copy in response to a user's request," but "ISPs that provide additional unrequested copies ... in response to a user's request for a single copy ... may be liable." There is no basis to conclude that "additional unrequested copies" are of any significance when a machine is simply a passive agent. For instance, in MP3tunes , the system was designed to seek out the copyrighted material-album cover art which matched the user's songs. EMI Christian Music Grp., Inc. v. MP3tunes, LLC ,
While I concur in the result of remanding to the district court for further factfinding, I cannot agree with conceptualizing volitional conduct in such a way that an ISP does not act volitionally when it automatically makes one, but not more than one, unrequested copy in response to a user's request for a copy. I believe this volitional-conduct analysis must enter the landscape of multiple devices, mindful of both our copy-shop past and the realities of functional website design in our present.
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922 F.3d 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bwp-media-us-inc-v-polyvore-inc-ca2-2019.