Healthcare Advocates, Inc. v. Harding, Earley, Follmer & Frailey

497 F. Supp. 2d 627, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52544, 2007 WL 2085358
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 2007
DocketCivil Action 05-3524
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 497 F. Supp. 2d 627 (Healthcare Advocates, Inc. v. Harding, Earley, Follmer & Frailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Healthcare Advocates, Inc. v. Harding, Earley, Follmer & Frailey, 497 F. Supp. 2d 627, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52544, 2007 WL 2085358 (E.D. Pa. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ROBERT F. KELLY, Senior District Judge.

Presently before this Court is the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Defendant Harding, Earley, Follmer & Frai-ley, John F.A. Earley III, Charles L. *630 Riddle, Frank J. Bonini Jr., and Kimber Titus (collectively the “Harding firm”). Also before this Court is the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment filed by Plaintiff Healthcare Advocates, Inc. For the following reasons, Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is granted, and Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment is denied.

I. BACKGROUND

Healthcare Advocates is a patient advocacy organization that assists its members in their dealings with health care providers. The Harding firm is a boutique law firm located in suburban Philadelphia that focuses its practice on intellectual property law. Healthcare Advocates was the plaintiff in a lawsuit filed in June of 2003 by its founder and president Kevin Flynn in which he alleged that a competitor of the company infringed trademarks and misappropriated trade secrets belonging to Healthcare Advocates. The Harding firm represented the defendants in that lawsuit, an action which was dismissed by this Court on summary judgment. Flynn v. Health Advocate, Inc., No. 03-3764, 2005 WL 288989 (E.D.Pa. Feb. 8, 2005) (hereinafter the “Underlying Litigation”).

The present civil action arises out of events that occurred in the pre-discovery phase of the Underlying Litigation. The facts of this case are relatively simple. Healthcare Advocates commenced the Underlying Litigation by filing a complaint on June 23, 2003. After receiving the complaint, the Harding firm began investigating the facts behind the allegations contained therein. The investigation led the Harding firm to search on the Internet for information about Healthcare Advocates. On July 9, 2003, and July 14, 2003, employees of the Harding firm accessed a website operated by the Internet Archive (www. archive.org), and viewed archived screen-shots 1 of Healthcare Advocates’ website (www.healthcareadvocates.com) via a tool contained on Internet Archive’s website called the Wayback Machine. The Way-back Machine allowed the Harding firm to see what Healthcare Advocates’ public website looked like prior to the date the complaint was filed in the Underlying Litigation.

Viewing the content that Healthcare Advocates had included on its public website in the past was very useful to the Harding firm in assessing the merits of the trademark infringement and trade secret misappropriation claims brought against their clients. The Harding firm also printed copies of each archived screenshot of Healthcare Advocates’ public website that they viewed via the Wayback Machine. The images were used during the course of the Underlying Litigation. The Harding firm did not actively save any of the screenshots they viewed onto their computer hard drives.

In this civil action, Healthcare Advocates alleges that the Harding firm’s use of the Wayback Machine to obtain archived screenshots constituted “hacking.” While the word hacking is not defined in the Complaint, Healthcare Advocates claims that the Harding firm manipulated the Wayback Machine on July 9, 2003, and July 14, 2003, in a way that rendered useless a protective measure that it had employed on its website. The protective measure at issue was a robots.txt file. *631 Healthcare Advocates placed this file on its website as a means of preventing the public from accessing archived screenshots of www.healthcareadvocates.com that were present on Internet Archives’ database. Healthcare Advocates believes that the robots.txt file acted like a digital padlock. Since the Harding firm did not have the “key,” Healthcare Advocates argues that they could only have obtained these protected images by breaking the robots.txt “lock.”

By way of background, the Internet Archive is a nonprofit organization that has created an online library of digital media in an effort to preserve digital content for future reference. Its digital database is equivalent to a paper library, but is filled with digital media like websites instead of books. The library includes a collection of chronological records of various websites which Internet Archive makes available at no cost to the public via the Wayback Machine. The library’s records include more than 85 billion screenshots of web pages which are stored on a computer database in California. Internet Archive’s database provides users with the ability to study websites that may have been changed or no longer exist.

The chronological records are compiled by routinely taking screenshots of websites as they exist on various days. Internet Archive collects images through a process called crawling. A crawler or robot is an automated program that scours the Internet and takes pictures of every web page that it is instructed to visit. The most widely recognized use of screenshots is for indexing by search engines. Through indexing, search engines such as Google create lists of websites. These lists allow the search engine to provide faster searches, because the sites are all cataloged in the search engine’s memory which negates the need to access the web to compile search results. A crawler provides the new screenshots Internet Archive uses to complete its chronologies.

Any person with a web browser can search Internet Archive’s database of archived images. Searching the database is accomplished via the Wayback Machine, which Internet Archive provides on its website. The Wayback Machine is an information retrieval system that allows the user to request archived screenshots of web pages that may be contained on the database, and it is easy to use. First, a person logs onto Internet Archive’s website located at www.archive.org, where the user will see a box in the middle of the homepage bearing the title “Wayback Machine.” In the box there is a small input field. The user enters the web address of the desired site into the input field, following the http:// prompt, and hits the “Take Me Back” button found directly below to initiate a search of Internet Archive’s database.

If screenshots matching the user’s web address request are available, a list of the dates on which images were taken is displayed on the user’s computer screen in vertical columns grouped by year. Clicking on a particular date retrieves the screenshots of the website archived for that specific date. The image appears in the user’s web browser just like a live website would appear, however, the user is not viewing a live website. Instead, the user sees the static version of the website that is stored in Internet Archive’s database. The Wayback Machine only provides a window into the past where users can see what a website looked like on a specific date.

The creators of the archives seek only to include publicly available websites in their library. Websites that require passwords for access are neither included nor crawled. Website owners who do not want their sites preserved in the database can *632 request to be excluded. Internet Archives has an exclusion policy in place that accommodates these requests, i.e. the robots.txt protocol.

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Bluebook (online)
497 F. Supp. 2d 627, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52544, 2007 WL 2085358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healthcare-advocates-inc-v-harding-earley-follmer-frailey-paed-2007.