Too Much Media, LLC v. Hale

993 A.2d 845, 413 N.J. Super. 135
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedApril 22, 2010
DocketA-0964-09T3
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 993 A.2d 845 (Too Much Media, LLC v. Hale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Too Much Media, LLC v. Hale, 993 A.2d 845, 413 N.J. Super. 135 (N.J. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

993 A.2d 845 (2010)
413 N.J. Super. 135

TOO MUCH MEDIA, LLC, John Albright and Charles Berrebbi, Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
Shellee HALE, Defendant-Appellant.

No. A-0964-09T3

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued March 2, 2010.
Decided April 22, 2010.

*848 Jeffrey M. Pollock, Lawrenceville, argued the cause for appellant (Fox Rothschild, attorneys; Mr. Pollock, of counsel; Mr. Pollock, Barry J. Muller, and Joseph Schramm, III, on the brief).

Joel N. Kreizman, Ocean, argued the cause for respondents (Evans, Osborne and Kreizman, attorneys; Mr. Kreizman, of counsel and on the brief).

McCusker, Anselmi, Rosen & Carvelli, Florham Park, attorneys for amici curiae North Jersey Media Group, Inc., the New Jersey Press Association, NBC Universal, Inc. and The New York Times Company (Jennifer A. Borg and Thomas Cafferty, of counsel; Bruce S. Rosen, on the brief).

Before Judges CARCHMAN, PARRILLO, and LIHOTZ.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

PARRILLO, J.A.D.

We granted leave to appeal to decide whether the protections of New Jersey's Shield Law, N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-21, extend to an operator of a website so as to bar from disclosure sources from which she obtained information in her investigation of the online adult entertainment industry and later posted on internet bulletin boards.

Plaintiff Too Much Media, Inc. (TMM), owned by plaintiffs John Albright and Charles Berrebbi, is a software company in Freehold that manufactures, as its principal product, NATS, a prepackaged *849 "affiliate" or tracking software. Different websites, affiliated with one another for common business purposes, place links and banners on each other's websites as a form of reciprocal advertising, and when a banner or link is "checked," the user is transferred to the affiliate site. NATS functioned as the financial intermediary between these affiliated websites, allowing website owners to track which other "affiliate" websites were sending customers to them and thereby determine what commissions were due to the referring website. NATS did not collect money from the users—it simply provided a means of tracking sales and commissions due. TMM made its profit by selling the software and charging a licensing fee. Many of TMM's customers who are "affiliates" to each other are in the "adult entertainment" business.

In Fall 2007, TMM experienced a security breach in which hackers compromised non-unique user names and passwords maintained in the NATS database for TMM clients and accessed subscriber lists to various porn websites and customer e-mail addresses. Obviously, such a security breach is damaging to a website's business and, due to the supposedly private nature of online pornography viewing, especially embarrassing for the customers of the website. This breach created a substantial amount of conversation within the online porn industry and was reported by major news agencies as early as January 2008.

Defendant Shellee Hale, a Washington State resident who worked for Microsoft and then operated a computer consulting company until 1994, began a business in 2007 as a certified life coach. In connection with that business, defendant operated two websites. Via these websites, users, without leaving their computers, were able to utilize webcams to project real-time images of themselves to another viewing a computer screen and thus interact electronically face-to-face over long distances. At some point in this business venture, defendant became distraught over the number of instances in which she was subjected to "cyber-flashers" who exposed themselves naked to her through the camera, under the guise of seeking life-skills coaching. When defendant's server did not remedy her complaints, she was determined to investigate what she perceived to be criminal activity in the online adult entertainment industry.

In October 2007, defendant launched a website called "Pornafia," www.pornafia. com, purportedly "to inform the public on scams, fraud, [and] technological issues" in the adult entertainment industry. According to a press release posted on February 8, 2008:

[Pornafia] came about in reaction to the unprecedented levels of criminal activity now rampant within the global adult entertainment industry, which have until now gone largely unchecked, with the aim of providing a cost free information resource for victims, potential victims, legitimate industry players, and pertinent government agencies worldwide.

Defendant further specified the crimes as "credit card fraud, identity theft, affiliate fraud and PPC fraud." She identified the Pornafia website as an "information exchange," and later described it alternatively as a "bulletin board" or "message board."

Despite defendant's announcement, however, the website was never fully launched and therefore published no findings. Although defendant said that the "front end of [the website] was a news magazine," she did not identify any journalist hired, and admitted that "that portion of the site was still being worked on and was not live."

Defendant claims, nevertheless, to have pursued an investigation of the online *850 adult entertainment industry. To this end, she formed a limited liability company, ES Enterprises, under which she created two webcam sites, "sexyteaser.com" and "sextyteaserguys.com," to interact on various adult industry websites and to "start to develop relationships, and get into this business under somewhat of a pretext." Defendant first discussed these websites with the Attorney General of Washington, "[b]ecause I wanted to make sure that they were aware of what I was ... going to be doing."

Defendant also reviewed web pages of the porn industry and news media sites, interviewed persons in the industry and attended six industry trade shows. One of the primary means she utilized for collecting and communicating information was through porn industry weblogs (blogs) and message boards such as www.jbm.com, www.gfy.com and www.Oprano.com (Oprano), the self described "Wall Street Journal for the online adult entertainment industry." These are forums where members, in order to facilitate discussion, read and post their thoughts and opinions on various subjects. The content is usually available to the public for viewing. In order to post on the board, however, one must become a registered user by submitting an online form, including a name, e-mail address and a chosen username. Once approved by a website administrator, a user is free to post on the board; such posts are unfiltered and, ordinarily, not subject to review by the site administrator prior to being posted.

Defendant's investigation ultimately focused on TMM. To that end, she reviewed numerous posts and online articles related to the 2007 security breach of TMM's NATS database. Defendant also examined pleadings from an open litigation[1] in which TMM's prime competitor, NR Media, sued TMM for defamation and tortious interference, among other claims, over comments by TMM that NR Media had not properly paid its affiliates. Defendant supposedly also talked to a person who told her confidentially that Albright had "threatened their life."

On several occasions, defendant made numerous posts on Oprano about TMM. For example, on March 17, 2008, defendant posted:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
993 A.2d 845, 413 N.J. Super. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/too-much-media-llc-v-hale-njsuperctappdiv-2010.