Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

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Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby 23 » Fri Mar 25, 2011 1:28 pm

http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news ... e-loss.ars
Copyright troll Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

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Whoops—in its bid to sue hundreds of bloggers, commentors, and website operators from posting even a few sentences from newspaper stories, the copyright zealots at Righthaven have just scored an own goal. Last Friday, a federal judge ruled in one of the company's many lawsuits, saying that even the complete republication of copyrighted newspaper content can be "fair use."

Righthaven has achieved national notoriety for its business model, which involves scouring the Web—including tiny blogs and nonprofits—for Las Vegas Review Journal and other newspaper stories. When it finds a match, Righthaven licenses the copyright from the cooperating newspaper and sues the article poster without warning for statutory damages of up to $150,000. In addition, it routinely demands that the poster's domain name be transferred to Righthaven.

The company's most controversial cases have involved posters who only used a small percentage of the original article, or instances where Righthaven sued the very sources who had provided the basic information for an article, then posted the result to their own website. But Righthaven has also gone after many sites that posted the complete text of a newspaper article, something far less likely to be seen as fair use.

That was the case with the Oregon-based Center for Intercultural Organizing (CIO), which Righthaven sued in August 2010 after the group posted a Review-Journal newspaper article on the deportation of illegal immigrants on its own website. The case must have seemed like a good fit for Righthaven; it had found someone taking the entire article! Defense lawyers contented themselves with arguing that the case should be heard in Nevada, and it didn't even bother to contest the issue on fair use grounds.

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But federal judges have tremendous power over their cases, and on November 15, 2010, federal judge James Mahan on his own initiative issued a terse order. "The court hereby orders the plaintiff to show cause why this case should not be dismissed under the 17 U.S.C. § 107 Fair Use exception," he wrote.

At a hearing last week, the judge decided that CIO's use of the full article text was, in fact, a fair use under the "four-factor test" enshrined in law.

Steve Green, a reporter at the competing Las Vegas Sun newspaper, attended the hearing. Judge Mahan told both sides that the purpose of copyright law was to encourage creativity and to disseminate public access to information, so long as that did not unfairly hinder the market for the original story. In this case, Mahan said that the tiny Oregon nonprofit had essentially zero overlap between the readers of its website and the readers of the Review-Journal. In addition, the effect on the "market" for the work is unclear, since Righthaven is solely using the copyright to prosecute a lawsuit, not to defend its news operations (it has none).

The reposted article also fit within CIO's nonprofit educational mission, and the judge said that it was largely informational in nature, rather than creative.

The judge also blasted Righthaven for not notifying groups like CIO before filing a federal lawsuit; most would no doubt remove or limit the offending material if notified by the copyright holder.

As Green noted in a follow-up piece, the result here is almost comical: Righthaven goes to war in the name of tough copyright enforcement and winds up with a ruling that complete republication by some nonprofits falls under the scope of fair use. "Some 250 Righthaven lawsuits later, Righthaven's startling achievement is that newspapers now have less—not more—protection from copyright infringers," Green concluded.

The ruling isn't as "out there" as it might initially sound; courts have long recognized various complete reuses as "fair." As lawyer Jason Schultz pointed out in an amicus brief to the court, this was true even of the famous Sony decision that legalized the VCR in America; complete shows could be copied and it was "fair."

The Electronic Frontier Foundation rejoiced at the "persuasive precedent" the case will set, though Righthaven told the judge it would appeal.

This isn't the first time that a judge has found a fair use in a Righthaven lawsuit, though the previous decision involved only a section of an article rather than the entire piece.
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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Mar 26, 2011 1:31 am

.

Nice!

That judge just legalized about half of what we do here at RI. Including now thousands of articles I posted myself (often with fair use notices making the same points) on threads like the Wall Street Boom and the Wikileaks Question.

Notwithstanding that the host is Canadian. Um, right Jeff?

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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby Jeff » Sat Mar 26, 2011 12:43 pm

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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Mar 26, 2011 2:02 pm

.

I meant the ISP hosting the .ca site is in Canada and possibly not subject (never mind, probably is under NAFTA) -- but anyway cases would be brought in Canada, right? Ummmmm... duh... slurp (of drool)...

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Last edited by JackRiddler on Sat Mar 26, 2011 5:50 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby justdrew » Sat Mar 26, 2011 2:09 pm

Jeff's just a sock puppet for the real operators of RI, A Secret Noodle Ring out of Minnesota. and wronghaven wouldn't dare go against them.



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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby Jeff » Sat Mar 26, 2011 3:36 pm

JackRiddler wrote:I meant the ISP hosting the .ca site is in Canada and possibly not subject (never mind, probably is under NAFTA) -- but anyway cases would be brought in Canada, right? Ummmmm... duh... slurp (of drool)...


The domain name has a Canadian registry. Brother Theodore thought it was a good idea at the time.
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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Mar 26, 2011 5:52 pm

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War on the Internet - What's the RI Game-Plan?
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=30492

Thu Dec 09, 2010 2:44 am

The copyright cops shutting down entire domains. Attack on Wikileaks and its mirrors and potentially anyone even quoting the damn cables. Countries like Australia considering lists of forbidden sites. Making ISPs liable for hosted content. US military's Cybercom is officially activated. Net neutrality on the brink as ISPs like Comcast look to impose tiered service. Efforts to enforce uniform fair-use rules by law rather than court suit.



Canada Caps Internet Usage
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=31035

for those who don't live in this joke of a country, one company, BELL, owns the entirety of the internet and huge chunk of broadcast television (networks and delivery-satellite TV). They want people to order pay-per-view movies for $6 a pop and could not abide NETFLIX coming in to the country and getting a cut of their loot. They requested the CRTC, the "regulatory" body that governs communications which is staffed wholly by former BELL bigwigs, for "Usage-Based Billing" and (surprise) go their way.



Take Over the Internet and RULE THE WORLD!
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=23880

... It's very important for the ISPs to hide the fact that running an established infrastructure is actually cheaper than building it in the first place. So they've taken to whining about their supposedly staggering higher expenses due to increased bandwidth use. Their new hope for growth is to leverage their effective cartel position in service distribution to add parasitic revenue streams ...



Internet: It's been real, people, but the boom is lowering
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=30071

Thu Nov 04, 2010 10:21 am
NINETY-FIVE candidates for political office in 2010, all of them Democrats, signed the pledge to strongly protect Net neutrality at http://netneutralityprotectors.com/

On Tuesday, every single one of them lost. Obviously not because of their stand on net neutrality, which I doubt was a primary issue in any of their election fights...



Communicate if Your Government Shuts Off Your Internet
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=31140&hilit=war+on+internet

Feb 7, 2010...
http://howto.wired.com/wiki/Communicate ... r_Internet

Scenario: Your government is displeased with the communication going on in your location and pulls the plug on your internet access, most likely by telling the major ISPs to turn off service.
This is what happened in Egypt Jan. 25 prompted by citizen protests, with sources estimating that the Egyptian government cut off approximately 88 percent of the country's internet access. What do you do without internet? Step 1: Stop crying in the corner. Then start taking steps to reconnect with your network. Here’s a list of things you can do to keep the communication flowing.
This article is part of a wiki anyone can edit. If you have advice to add, please log in and contribute.
Contents [hide]
1 Preventive measures
1.1 Make your network tangible
1.2 Broadcast on the radio
1.3 Phone
1.4 Fax
1.5 Non-Virtual Bulletin Board
2 Getting back online
2.1 Find the privately-run ISPs
2.2 Return to dial-up
2.3 Ad-Hoc Networking
2.4 Build Large Bridged Wireless Network
2.5 Nintendo DS
2.6 Intranet
2.7 Become untraceable
3 Get satellite access
4 Back to Basics
5 Additional Resources



The Companies Who Support Censoring the Internet
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=30963

Jan 22, 2011 5:50 pm

A group of companies sent a letter to to Attorney General Eric Holder and ICE boss John Morton today (with cc's to VP Joe Biden, Homeland Security boss Janet Napolitano, IP Czar Victoria Espinel, Rep. Lamar Smith, Rep. John Conyers, Senator Patrick Leahy and Senator Charles Grassley), supporting the continued seizure of domain names they don't like, as well as the new COICA censorship bill, despite the serious Constitutional questions raised about how such seizures violate due process and free speech principles. While many reporting on this letter refused to actually post a copy of the full letter, kudos to Greg Sandoval over at News.com for doing so ....



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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby 82_28 » Mon Mar 28, 2011 4:51 pm

In all of my non-rigorous nor intuitive (according to some) inner speculation and along with this new NYT paywall that has been instituted, I believe we are looking at industry's next attempt to inflate an extremely dysfunctional bubble in order to extract revenue from a dying form of information dispersal. The bubble is to sue, sue, sue. I've imagined scenarios where Jeff and the rest may need to scrub every last thing pasted here over the years in fear of having a whole new industry breathing down Jeff (and the rest of us') necks.

It came to me when I was wondering the other day, like seriously, what really is the fucking difference between Napster/audiogalaxy and Pandora? What is the difference? I would download shit night and day back in the day. We'd throw a party and if someone wanted to hear something, I treated Napster as my free little jukebox. I still have all those 12 year old files somewhere. Yet when it comes down to it, it was only "mood music". Pandora now does the same thing. But to me, it serves the same purpose and it DOES THE SAME THING. Only you don't get to keep the files unless you're able to losslessly rip the stream.

I began to imagine what possibly could Pandora's ultimate business model be. It came to me as I have been slightly warned not to use Pandora while at work, that it is to catch places with value and money in the bank, assets etc, utilizing the service. Eventually. Once people become accustomed to just taking their computer to work and using Pandora to blast the tune algorithms for the mood you want in your joint, then they will break out the -- A HA! -- Pandora's Box. A little funny they chose that name for something so easy, free and useful, eh?

It will be an app on an iphone or something similar. Seriously here, guys. It will be an app on an iphone that will recognize the sonic signature of a song originating from the Pandora servers. A beacon, a tweet, outside of human hearing range and all it will take is "send complaint" and you're done. The sender gets a cut of the revenue generated from fines and punishment. And from there this "business model" will grow and metastasize into other forms of corporate, cloud, control.

Because digital information is, by nature, freely copied, it is an endless stream of revenue and social control. It is like a vacuum that will suck up all those dollars they printed for the last bubble.

Just my theory. Watch for it.

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I may make an OP about this. . .

But thought I would put it here first. . .
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Righthaven Ordered To Pay $5,000 Fine

Postby MinM » Sat Jul 16, 2011 9:06 am

Righthaven founded its controversial copyright-enforcement business by hoping to collect money from websites that copied newspaper content, several thousand dollars at a time. But it looks like money is about to start flowing out of Righthaven’s pockets, not into them. Today, the judge in charge of the company’s lawsuit against the Democratic Underground has ordered Righthaven to pay $5,000 for not disclosing the fact that it was splitting its revenues 50/50 with Stephens Media, owner of the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

A quick recap: Righthaven has filed more than 270 copyright lawsuits against various blogs and websites, claiming that they illegally copied material from The Denver Post and the Las Vegas Review-Journal. More than 100 websites have reached confidential settlements, but dozens of others have pushed back. None have pushed harder than Democratic Underground (DU), a liberal political news site which acquired pro bono counsel from Fenwick & West and the Electronic Frontier Foundation. U.S. District Judge Roger Hunt, who is overseeing the DU case, ultimately ordered Righthaven to reveal its contract with Stephens Media; and two weeks ago, Hunt ruled that Righthaven didn’t have standing to file suit at all.

He also ordered Righthaven to explain why it shouldn’t be sanctioned for violating a local Nevada litigation rule that requires it to disclose any party with a significant financial interest in the lawsuit. Stephens Media stood to gain 50% from any lawsuit Righthaven filed over its copyrights, but that wasn’t disclosed until the contract was unsealed—several months after the suit was filed.

Righthaven explained its oversight by essentially saying it was an honest mistake by two attorneys who no longer work with Righthaven. Judge Hunt didn’t accept that excuse, saying that it was Righthaven CEO Steve Gibson who created the contract, signed off on some disclosures, and guided the entire Righthaven copyright-enforcement campaign.

A transcript of the sanctions hearing isn’t yet available, but Steve Green of the Las Vegas Sun reported from the hearing this morning.

After the hearing, Righthaven lawyer Shawn Mangano told the Sun that despite the relatively light sanction, Righthaven is considering appealing Hunt’s decision.

When the transcript does come out, it’s going to show that the lack of disclosure wasn’t the only thing that Hunt was upset about. Hunt kicked off the hearing by saying: “In the court’s view, the arrangement between Righthaven and Stephens Media is nothing more, nor less, than a law firm — which incidentally I don’t think is licensed to practice law in this state — with a contingent fee agreement masquerading as a company.”

In a separate case that Righthaven lost, it has been ordered to pay $3,815 in legal fees by July 25. And in the Hoehn case against an online commenter—which Righthaven also lost—defense attorneys are asking for more than $30,000. The Democratic Underground has indicated it will also seek legal fees, and the demand in that heavily litigated case could easily be six figures.
Related Stories

* In Wake Of Righthaven's Loss, Counter-Attacks--And A Response From Gibson
* Judge: Righthaven Has No Standing To File Lawsuits—Case Dismissed
* Righthaven Target Hits Back With Class Action Counter-Attack
* Righthaven's Secret Contract Revealed: Will Its Strategy Collapse?


By Joe Mullin
twitter @joemullin Jul 14, 2011 6:33 PM ET

Steve Gibson, CEO, Righthaven
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http://paidcontent.org/article/419-righ ... 000-fine-/

The Continuing Woes of Righthaven - On the Media
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Re: Righthaven achieves spectacular "fair use" loss

Postby MinM » Fri Jul 19, 2013 8:27 am

Thank You For Using The Internet! We Regret To Inform You That Your Free Trial Has Expired
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Between 1999 and 2001, the Napster peer-to-peer file sharing program was indispensable for millions. At its peak, the service drew 26.4 million monthly unique users, who spent a collective 6.3 billion minutes a month pilfering shared hard drives for free music. In just over two years, Napster managed to cripple and nearly destroy the music industry. At the same time, it conditioned a generation to see the internet as a place where almost anything can, and therefore should, be free.

Since its beginning, the internet and a broad, loose conception of “freedom” have been inextricably linked. The “first web page”, authored by Tim Berners Lee, described the web as a “wide-area hypermedia information retrieval initiative aiming to give universal access to a large universe of documents”. The notion of a “free and open internet” has animated some of the web’s biggest movements, from open source software to Wikipedia to, in some cases, outright theft. Broadband connections grew popular, leaving users continuously logged on. Regular internet users soon came to expect that almost every type of media they once paid for — music, movies, news — would be available for free, legally or otherwise.

That era — let’s call it the internet’s free trial period — is coming to an end. In the 12 years since courts shut down Napster, the internet has taken its hatchet to every other branch of the media industry, deftly pruning ad dollars, jobs, and shaving away bottom lines. Now the reaction, opposite but never quite equal, and always late, is starting to take effect. The untamed and lawless expanses of web content are quickly being replaced by paywalls and monthly fees. And, surprisingly, we don’t really seem to mind all that much. Most of us don’t even seem to notice.

Before sites like Amazon and eBay legitimized the process, paying for anything online — either physical or digital — was widely perceived as a risky proposition. A 2001 New York Times article captures this consumer trepidation with e-commerce, quoting a survey in which over 20 percent of respondents were identified as either “fearful browsers” or “suspicious learners”:

“The online shoppers are distinguished from the non shoppers by a single differentiator: credit card fear. They are fearful of the computer and are afraid they won’t get their merchandise or that their credit card will be stolen.

While the reliability and ease of e-commerce sites like Amazon quickly assuaged users’ basic worries, digital shopping carts were reserved almost exclusively for physical goods. Amazon purchases became second nature, while digital marketplaces like Rhapsody struggled to find a model to get customers to pay for a product they couldn’t hold in their hands.

In 2003 that all changed, with the launch of the iTunes music store. With the backing of all five major record labels, Apple and Steve Jobs turned the music industry on its head, introducing the first efficient, truly appealing system for buying a digital product online. Set at 99 cents a song, the low price point helped Apple sell a million songs in its first month of operation (over 50 million in its first year). But more importantly, it was a crucial first step in conditioning normal internet users to pay for media online.

“99 cents felt like the price point that would be just enticing enough,” Paul Vidich, a former executive vice president of Warner Music Group, and the first to suggest the 99 cent price point to Jobs, told BuzzFeed. “It was low enough that in that moment, when you’re doing that value equation in your head, it’s something you don’t have to think twice about before buying.” Vidich also credits iTunes’ simple interface and one-click purchasing, which made buying a painless, easily repeatable experience — even psychologically satisfying. “We made it very easy to have honest people act honestly, Vidich said. “Most people don’t desire to steal this stuff. There’ll always be the hacker vanity of getting it for free but the majority of people aren’t in that category. If you give people the right things in the right window in the right time, they’ll pay.”

The growth of iTunes and the music store was the beginning for paid media online. “I was confident and so was Steve that we’d have some success, but we did not anticipate it would be as big as it was,” Vidich confessed. At the time, Apple had no way of knowing it, but 99 cent songs were indeed the turning point, priming users for Apple’s next coup. When iTunes’ App Store caught fire, online digital purchases graduated from a regular semi-habit to a weekly, or even daily, part of life. Even free apps had to be “purchased” through the same system and with the same password, ingraining the behavior deeper and deeper with every mouse click and finger swipe. It’d be fair to assume that most regular iOS users don’t remember when they first added a credit card to their iTunes accounts.

Ten years later, iTunes has sold over 25 billion songs. It recently celebrated its 50 billionth app download. Other companies, like Amazon, which was armed with millions of credit-card linked profiles from selling physical goods, followed suit, building out their own vast digital libraries. Meanwhile, services like Netflix transformed from a DVD mailing service into a mammoth on-demand streaming video network with over 30 million paid subscribers. Platforms like Steam, once seen as a nuisance by the gaming community, quickly became the most trusted destination for game purchases, digital or otherwise, with over 54 million active user accounts.
The rise of paid sites like Netflix coupled with wildly effective crackdowns on online piracy and the shutdown of massive file sharing sites like Megaupload mean that it’s now often easier for the average internet user to pay a nominal monthly fee for a Netflix account than navigate the murky waters of illegal streaming and bit torrent sites.

Even news media, arguably the hardest hit by the “everything for free” ethos of the web, is seeing a change of heart — albeit, a slower one. Paywalls, once denounced as a suicidal move for news outlets, have proved effective for larger organizations. Now, over 450 of the nation’s 1,380 dailies have digital play plans in place or in the works, according to the Pew Research Center.

There’s a shift in reader sentiment as well. In 2010, Pew’s State of the Media report revealed that 82 percent of its 11,000 respondents would abandon their favorite news site if it introduced a paywall. In 2012, a study by DigiCareers posed the same question. This time, only 52 percent indicated they’d be willing to abandon their favorite site if it erected a paywall. Similarly, a report from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism noted “a significant shift in public attitudes towards digital news, with more than twice as many people paying for digital news content than a year ago.”

As far as trends move, paid news’ is creaking along glacially. The percentage of enthusiastic paywall subscribers is still below 20 percent, but it’s growing — an encouraging sign for a business model that was widely predicted to fail at the outset. “Today’s paywalls are by no means perfect, [and] have a lot of big holes in them,” Magid Advisors’ president Mike Vorhaus told BuzzFeed. “But we’re all going to pay for more and pay for stuff we’re not used to paying for. And as a result, publishers of all kinds will continue do a better job figuring out what we value and packaging our content better and more efficiently.”

While we’re nowhere near the end of the “free” internet, the web’s untamed corners undoubtedly feel smaller; increasingly, they’re hardly “untamed” at all, subject to various levels of co-opting by the companies they appear to undercut. A recent Variety article on password sharing revealed that while 40 percent of Netflix and 36 percent of HBO Go subscribers share their login credentials, the streaming companies don’t seem all that worried. “Enabling freeloading could be a counterintuitively savvy promotional tool for getting potential customers hooked on a product they wouldn’t otherwise sample,” the article speculates. Adding credence to the theory, the study also notes that “forty-one percent of HBO non-subs said they were willing to fork over fees within the next six months, while 33% of Netflix non-subs said they were ready to pay, as well.”

Today, finally, the pendulum is swinging back, after years of file sharing, downloads, and obsessive browsing that have left us, the consumers, engorged and hooked on new and enticing versions of every major media category.

“It’s a huge sea change,” Vorhaus said. “I would have told you five years ago that the paid content world had a dismal future. Now, I’d say that paid media is in the 2nd inning, and there’s still a lot of runs and at-bats coming down the road.”

http://www.buzzfeed.com/charliewarzel/t ... rm-you-tha

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