- Failed to respond to Plaintiff's numerous letters, forcing the issuance of a subpoena.
- At his deposition, admitted to pirating American Heist. In fact, he had continued to use Bit Torrent to pirate movies right up to the day before his deposition.
- Failed to file an answer to Plaintiff's complaint for almost three months.
- Filed an answer only after Plaintiff moved for default.
- Despite admitting pirating Plaintiff's work in his deposition, denied liability in his answer.
- Raised seven "baseless" defenses, including that downloading via Bit Torrent was "fair use" and that American Heist was not eligible for copyright protection.[ref]Glacier Films at 7-8[/ref]
9th Circuit Rejects Courts' "One Size Fits All" Bit Torrent Ruling
08/02/2018
Stephen Carlisle
No Subjects
The old adage of "be careful what you wish for, because you might get it" was never more true than when looking at Bit Torrent litigation.
A recent case from Oregon highlights this. The District Court refused to award attorney's fees to a successful Bit Torrent Plaintiff. The Court justified the denial partly because the same attorney had filed over 300 copyright infringement cases, thus indicating an "overaggressive assertion of copyright claims." The Ninth Circuit, in reversing, pointedly noted that the large amount of copyright cases was due in part to the District Court's own case management order which limited Bit Torrent plaintiffs to suing one defendant at a time.[ref]Glacier Films (USA) Inc. v. Turchin 2018 WL 3542839 Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals at 2 and at endnote 6[/ref]
In other words, if you've got 100 people participating in a Bit Torrent swarm, you're going to get 100 lawsuits.
It's understandable that the Courts are frustrated with the large number of copyright lawsuits currently clogging up the court system. But these numerous lawsuits are the direct result of various court rulings making the conduct of Bit Torrent suits more difficult.
Let's rewind, shall we?
Way back when in 2003, the RIAA tried to serve subpoenas on Verizon to obtain the names and addresses of Verizon subscribers they suspected of peer to peer file sharing. Verizon refused. Ultimately, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that Verizon was not subject to a subpoena under the DMCA and directed the District Court to quash the subpoena.[ref]Recording Industry Association of America v. Verizon Internet Services 351 F.3d 1229 District of Columbia Circuit 2003[/ref]
So instead of simply serving a subpoena on an ISP, and getting a name, you now have to file a lawsuit. Since you do not know the name of the person behind the IP address, you have to sue them anonymously, then ask the Court for leave to file a third party subpoena. This leads to the eye-catching headlines of "RIAA sues grandmother" or "RIAA sues 12 year old girl." No they didn't. They sued an IP address because that's what the Court said they had to do. They had no idea who was behind the IP address. And, of course, these arguments never explain why being a grandmother confers blanket immunity from being sued for copyright infringement.
But, I digress.
Next, the Courts struggled with how many people could be sued in a single lawsuit. The theory underlying suing several persons in one case was that due to the nature of Bit Torrent technology, namely, that participants in a "swarm" (technical explanation here)[ref]Copyright Infringement Litigation Over BitTorrent File Sharing: Truth or Troll?[/ref] constituted a "single transaction or occurrence." Some Courts adopted this logic.[ref]Malibu Media, IIC v. Does 1-5 285 F.R.D. 593 District Court for the Southern District of New York, 2012[/ref] Other Courts noted that multiple defendants "raised a panoply of individual defenses, including…technological savvy, misidentification of ISP accounts, the kinds if WiFi equipment and security software utilized; and the location of defendant's router."[ref]In Re: BitTorrent Adult Film Copyright Infringement Cases 296 F.R.D. 80 Eastern District of New York 2012 at 12[/ref]
I can understand and appreciate the Court's position. However, requiring the Plaintiff to sue only one defendant at a time ensures that copyright owners wishing to vindicate their rights will be forced to file numerous lawsuits, possibly in the hundreds. How this is going to prevent "a waste of judicial resources"[ref]Id. at 15[/ref] is a mystery to me.
And, thus is born the tautology of the "copyright troll." Because the copyright owner has been forced by Court rulings to file lots of lawsuits against Bit Torrent users, the copyright owner now becomes a "copyright troll," well, because they file lots of lawsuits.
Part of the antipathy towards Bit Torrent Plaintiffs arises from the fact that many of the early cases were brought by producers of pornography.[ref]Id. at endnote 7[/ref] This has led to, in the words of the Ninth Circuit, a "one size fits all"[ref]Glacier Films at 1[/ref] approach to Bit Torrent litigation, in which the sins of other Bit Torrent cases are brought to bear on individual Bit Torrent cases.
Yet, the case at issue, Glacier Films (USA) Inc. v. Turchin, does not involve pornography at all. Plaintiff is the producer of a mainstream Hollywood movie: American Heist. The movie was set for wide release but was leaked over the internet before its release, where it was downloaded over 100,000 times.[ref]Glacier Films at 2[/ref] So devastating was this to the financial prospects of the film, that the distribution deal collapsed, forcing Plaintiff to release the film straight to DVD.[ref]Glacier Films at 7[/ref] Plaintiff tracked copies of the movie to Defendant's IP address, where their film had been shared over 80 times, and was associated with 700 other movie titles.
As you might imagine, Defendant was less than the picture of virtue. His litigation tactics bore this out.
No Tags