The US Court of Appeal for the 9th Circuit (California) unanimously
ruled yesterday that Gary Fung, the Canadian owner of BitTorrent website
isoHunt, had "induced" users to download and distribute films and TV
programmes, and that he could not rely on the DMCA safe harbor provisions for
protection.
Various film studios alleged that isohunt.com and related
websites, all run by Fung, induced third parties to download infringing copies
of the studios' works. The websites were all BitTorrent sites which enabled
file sharing and IsoHunt, Fung's "flagship" site, went a step further
by modifying torrent files to make them more reliable than when they were
uploaded to the site. IsoHunt also hosted a forum where users could post
comments; Fung would post comments and also moderated the forum.
The Court of Appeal affirmed the District Court's decision on liability,
confirming that Fung had induced users to illegally download and distribute
content and that the safe harbor provisions set out in the DCMA offered no
protection.
Two types of supporting evidence corroborated the conclusion that
Fung "acted with a purpose to cause copyright violations": first,
Fung took no steps "to develop filtering tools or other mechanisms to
diminish the infringing activity" by those using his services. Second, Fung
generated revenue almost exclusively by selling advertising space on his
websites.
As regards whether Fung could make use of the safe harbor
provisions, the Ninth Circuit was clear that it would be difficult for any
defendant who induces copyright infringement to rely on safe harbor. It went
on to say that Fung was ineligible because:
1. He had "red flag knowledge" of the infringement. Red
flag knowledge turns on whether a website provider is subjectively aware of
facts that would have made the infringement "objectively" obvious to
a reasonable person The court found that
films and TV shows were "sufficiently current and well-known that it would
have been objectively obvious to a reasonable person that the material
solicited and assisted was both copyrighted and not licensed to random members
of the public, and that the induced use was therefore infringing."
2. Fung profited from the infringement through advertising while
having the "right and ability to control" infringing activity occurring
through the various websites.
The case will now go back to the District Court for a decision on
damages and to finalise the injunction.The decision is not surprising. Henry Hoberman, Senior Executive Vice President and Global General Counsel for the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) has said:
"This ruling affirms a core principle of copyright law: those who build businesses around encouraging, enabling, and helping others to commit copyright infringement are themselves infringers, and will be held accountable for their illegal actions. It also strikes an important blow in the fight to preserve the jobs of millions of workers in the creative industries, whose hard work and investments are exploited by rogue websites for their own profit."
However, according to Advanced
Television, despite the injunction, isoHunt.com will continue to operate
through private servers in Canada and it is the fourth most popular BitTorrent
site on the Internet.
The decision is available here.
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