Metacapital Management, L.P. v. Meta Platforms, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 25, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-07615
StatusUnknown

This text of Metacapital Management, L.P. v. Meta Platforms, Inc. (Metacapital Management, L.P. v. Meta Platforms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metacapital Management, L.P. v. Meta Platforms, Inc., (S.D.N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER & FLOM LLP ONE MANHATTAN WEST N EW YO R K NY 1000 | FIRM/AFFILIATE OFFICES TEL: (212) 735-3000 □□□□□□□ FAX: (212) 735-2000 □□□ □□□□□ www.skadden.com WASHINGTON, D.C. 21 2-735-3007 BEIJING 917-777-3097 BRUSSELS EMAIL HONG KONG ANTHONY. DREYER@SKADDEN.COM LONDON May 19, 2023 SAO PAULO

The Honorable P. Kevin Castel United States Magistrate Judge, $.D.N.Y. 500 Pearl Street New York, NY 10007-1312 RE: Metacapital Mgmt, L.P. v. Meta Platforms, Inc. .1:22-cv-7615-PKC (S.D.N.Y.) Dear Judge Castel: We write on behalf of plaintiff Metacapital Management, L.P. (“Metacapital”), jointly with counsel for defendant Meta Platforms, Inc.’s (“MPI”), pursuant to Your Honor’s Individual Practice 3.B and Local Civil Rule 37.2, to respectfully request a conference regarding certain disputes related to the Proposed Stipulated Protective Order and the Proposed Stipulated Order Re: Discovery of Electronically Stored Information. The parties have met-and-conferred telephonically concerning these Orders several times, most recently on May 9, 2023. For the Court’s convenience, the parties attach hereto a single draft of each proposed order, highlighted and including each party’s proposed language for the disputed paragraphs (and, where practicable, highlighting indicating the points on which the parties differ). Additionally, the parties briefly set forth their substantive positions below. The parties exchanged their written positions earlier today, simultaneously, and therefore waive their right to respond in writing to the other party’s position (unless the Court solicits additional briefing): The Court concludes that experts and outside consultants should be subject to the same requirements for safeguarding confidential materials as named parties and their outside counsel. Submit Order for entry. (Letter Motion DE 43 is terminated. SO ORDERED. Dated: 5/25/2023 P. Kevin Castel

May 19, 2023 Page 2

PROPOSED STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER The parties principally disagree about one issue that impacts several interrelated provisions in the Proposed Stipulated Protective Order: Whether experts and other outside consultants should be subject to the same requirements for safeguarding confidential materials as the named parties and their outside counsel (as fleshed out primarily in Paragraph 7.2). The provisions impacted by resolution of this issue— and for which competing provisions are set forth in the attached draft—are: • Paragraph 2.12 • Paragraph 7.1(e) • Paragraph 7.2 Metacapital’s Position: MPI’s proposed Paragraph 7.2 imposes on all recipients of confidential materials a number of unduly onerous technical requirements for ensuring “data security.” But those requirements are both unnecessary and needlessly burdensome—particularly so for non-parties to the litigation such as consulting and testifying experts, who under MPI’s proposal also would be subject to an additional requirement that they may “only access and review” documents on a litigant’s e-discovery vendor platform. Notably, these requirements would apply to all confidential materials produced in this case, not simply attorneys’ eyes only or other highly confidential material. This is a straightforward trademark infringement case, and does not involve disclosure of any source code or trade secrets for which the strict obligations set forth in Paragraph 7.2 may be warranted. Indeed, at no point during the parties’ multiple meet-and-confers or in any of MPI’s correspondence has MPI articulated specific categories of responsive materials that would necessitate the heightened protections in Paragraph 7.2. Nor has MPI explained why the parties’ commitments in the Protective Order to take reasonable measures to safeguard the security of confidential and sensitive materials—without specifying the precise method by which the parties would do so—creates any substantial risk of unpermitted disclosure.1 In short, Paragraph 7.2 appears to impose significant burdens and costs with little, if any, demonstrable benefit. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Metacapital offered a compromise whereby the strictures of Paragraph 7.2 would apply to the actual parties to the litigation and their

1 Based on the parties’ correspondence and on meet-and-confers, Metacapital suspects that MPI is insisting on this provision because it has been utilized in other litigations to which MPI is a party. But a “one size fits all” approach to myriad litigations presenting disparate concerns makes little sense. May 19, 2023 Page 3

outside counsel, but would not sweep in other potential recipients of materials like experts retained specifically in connection with the litigation. Instead, such recipients would be required under Paragraph 7.1(e) to “take reasonable measures to safeguard the security and confidentiality of [confidential materials]” and execute an “Acknowledgment and Agreement to be Bound” explicitly confirming their agreement to take such reasonable measures. Metacapital’s proposal is a fair middle-ground that provides more than adequate protection. It is neither reasonable nor practical to impose the heightened requirements on third parties who will only receive a fraction of the discovery produced in this lawsuit, and who have less access to sophisticated data protection structures as the parties. Forcing experts and other third parties to only access and review confidential documents through the parties’ e-discovery vendor platform reduces flexibility, efficiency, and the speed with which materials can be shared, and may not always be possible technologically.2 In fact, by its terms, MPI’s proposal would create the absurd result that an expert would be in breach of the Protective Order if they merely print any confidential materials or review and maintain any hard copies of those materials. Finally, MPI’s proposal is confusing as a matter of drafting. MPI’s proposed Paragraph 2.12 would define “Party” to include not only the parties to the litigation and their outside counsel, but also “consultants” and “retained experts.”3 As just a few examples of the problems associated with this proposal, defining “Party” to include such third parties would place an affirmative obligation on consultants and experts to inform a Producing Party if they believed information was obtained or leaked without permission (Paragraph 5.2(d)), and give consultants and experts the right to challenge confidentiality designations (Paragraph 6.1). MPI’s Position: Both Metacapital and MPI agree that, given the nature of the parties’ businesses4 and the scope of discovery in this case, the parties and their outside attorneys must take

2 For example: Rather than simply sharing materials with an expert via a secure FTP site or other password-protected method, the parties and counsel now may be required to segregate portions of their e-vendor platforms from others, and create more limited forms of access to experts to ensure that they are not inadvertently exposed to other confidential materials irrelevant to their retention. 3 Metacapital still does not understand what distinction MPI is purporting to draw between “consultants” and “retained experts,” and thus proposed the parties refer to “consulting and testifying experts.” 4 Indeed, Metacapital’s counsel has referred to Metacapital’s business in prior discussions of the Protective Order: “Metacapital is a highly-regulated financial institution, with multiple layers of information security. Further, Metacapital's business model is premised in large part on keeping its confidential information private.” May 19, 2023 Page 4

reasonable measures to protect the security and confidentiality of one another’s information.

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Bluebook (online)
Metacapital Management, L.P. v. Meta Platforms, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metacapital-management-lp-v-meta-platforms-inc-nysd-2023.