As reported by the 1709 Blog back in February,
director Quentin Tarantino is currently suing popular media and gossip blog, Gawker, for the contributory
infringement of copyright in a script entitled, The Hateful Eight. The screenplay was leaked after the director
circulated it among six acquaintances. Thereafter, the script was uploaded to
two file-sharing sites: Anonfiles.com and Scribd.com. Gawker reported the leak
and provided hyperlinks to the uploaded files.
Quentin Tarantino |
Last week, a district court judge in the Ninth Circuit
granted Gawker’s motion to dismiss on the grounds that Tarantino had failed to
provide any evidence of direct infringement. Instead of providing the necessary
proof that someone copied the work and that Gawker’s actions contributed to
that direct infringement, Tarantino simply speculated that some direct
infringement must have taken place.
This leads one to wonder whether Tarantino’s
assumption that direct infringement occurred was misplaced. On the balance of
probabilities, it seems likely that someone will have downloaded the script from
the file-sharing sites. Ought the failure to provide a specific allegation of
such actions be grounds for motion to dismiss? Or ought the court presume
direct infringement and allow the case to continue to the discovery stage?
Also interesting is the court’s discussion of what
qualifies as a direct infringement. In a footnote, the court states that “even
if Plaintiff alleged that individuals accessed the links contained in Defendant’s
article in order to read Plaintiff’s script, such an allegation would still not
support Plaintiff’s contributory infringement claim against Defendant” because
“[s]imply viewing a copy of allegedly infringing work on one’s own computer
does not constitute direct infringement.” Some have questioned whether this
statement is consistent with a previous Ninth Circuit case of MAI Systems v
Peak Corp., 991 F.2d 551 (1993). According to this case, the automated copying
of protected material into a computer’s RAM is potentially grounds for direct infringement,
despite the temporary existence of the copy. Presumably if someone did use the
link to access the script, their viewing of the site would create a RAM copy
and thus constitute a direct infringement under the MAI holding.
The court will allow Tarantino to re-file the case with
more evidence by the end of the month. Meanwhile,
although he was initially so appalled by the leak that he decided to
scrap the project, the director has subsequently stated that he is continuing to work on
the script.
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