*1116
77 F.Supp.2d 1116
2000
Copr.L.Dec. P 28,014, 53 U.S.P.Q.2d 1361
Leslie
A. KELLY, et al., Plaintiff,
v.
ARRIBA
SOFT CORP., et al., Defendants.
No.
SACV99560GLT[JW].
United
States District Court,
C.D.
California.
Dec.
15, 1999.
Steven
L. Krongold, Krongold Law Firm, Costa Mesa, CA, for
Plaintiffs.
Judith
Bond Jennison, Perkins Coie LLP, Menlo Park, CA, for
Defendants.
ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
TAYLOR,
District Judge.
On apparent first impression, the Court holds the use by an Internet
"visual search engine" of others' copyrighted images is a prima facie copyright
violation, but it may be justified under the "fair use" doctrine. The Court finds that, under the
particular circumstances of this case, the "fair use" *1117 doctrine applies, and the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act is not violated.
Defendant's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Plaintiff's First and
Second Claims for Relief is GRANTED.
Plaintiff's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment is
DENIED.
I.
BACKGROUND
Defendant Ditto (formerly known as Arriba) operates a "visual search
engine" on the Internet. Like other
Internet search engines, it allows a user to obtain a list of related Web
content in response to a search query entered by the user. Unlike other Internet search engines,
Defendant's retrieves images instead of descriptive text. It produces a list of reduced,
"thumbnail" pictures related to the user's query.
During the period when most of the relevant events in this case occurred,
Defendant's visual search engine was known as the Arriba Vista Image
Searcher. By "clicking" on the
desired thumbnail, an Arriba Vista user could view the "image attributes" window
displaying the full-size version of the image, a description of its dimensions,
and an address for the Web site where it originated. (FN1) By clicking on the address, the user
could link to the originating Web site for the image.
(FN2)
Ditto's search engine (in both of its versions) works by maintaining an
indexed database of approximately two million thumbnail images. These thumbnails are obtained through
the operation of Ditto's "crawler," a computer program that travels the Web in
search of images to be converted into thumbnails and added to the index.
(FN3) Ditto's employees conduct a
final screening to rank the most relevant thumbnails and eliminate inappropriate
images.
Plaintiff Kelly is a photographer specializing in photographs of
California gold rush country and related to the works of Laura Ingalls
Wilder. He does not sell the
photographs independently, but his photographs have appeared in several
books. Plaintiff also maintains two
Web sites, one of which (www.goldrush1849.com) provides a "virtual tour" of
California's gold rush country and promotes Plaintiff's book on the subject, and
the other (www.showmethegold.com) markets corporate retreats in California's
gold rush country.
In January 1999, around thirty five of Plaintiff's images were indexed by
the Ditto crawler and put in Defendant's image database. As a result, these images were made
available in thumbnail form to users of Defendant's visual search
engine.
After being notified of Plaintiff's objections, Ditto removed the images
from its database, though due to various technical problems some of the images
reappeared a few times. Meanwhile
Plaintiff, having sent Defendant a notice of copyright infringement in January,
filed this action in April.
Plaintiff argues its copyrights in the images were infringed by
Defendant's actions and also alleges Defendant violated the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (DMCA) by removing or altering the copyright management
information associated with Plaintiff's images. (FN4)
*1118
II.
DISCUSSION
These cross motions for summary adjudication present two questions of
first impression. The first is
whether the display of copyrighted images by a "visual search engine" on the
Internet constitutes fair use under the Copyright Act. The second is whether the display of
such images without their copyright management information is a violation of the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
Summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine issue of fact and the
moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 56(c). If no material historical facts are
disputed, the ultimate conclusion to be drawn on the issue of "fair use" is for
the Court and not a jury. Harper
& Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539, 105 S.Ct.
2218, 85
L.Ed.2d
588 (1985); Fisher v. Dees, 794 F.2d 432, 436 (9th
Cir.1986).
A.
Fair Use
In order to show copyright infringement, Plaintiff must show ownership of
a valid copyright and invasion of one of the exclusive rights of copyright
holders. 17 U.S.C. s 106. Defendant
does not dispute the validity of Plaintiff's copyrights or his ownership of
them. Defendant also does not
dispute it reproduced and displayed Plaintiff's images in thumbnail form without
authorization. Plaintiff thus has
shown a prima facie case of copyright infringement unless the fair use doctrine
applies.
"Fair use" is a limitation on copyright owners' exclusive right "to
reproduce the copyrighted work in copies." 17 U.S.C. s 106(1). It is codified at 17 U.S.C. s 107, which
provides:
Notwithstanding
the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work,
including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other
means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news
reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship,
or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a
work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall
include--
(1)
the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a
commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational
purposes;
(2)
the nature of the copyrighted work;
(3)
the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted
work as a whole; and
(4)
the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted
work.
The
fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if
such finding is made upon consideration of all the above
factors.
Fair use is an affirmative defense, and defendants carry the burden of
proof on the issue. American
Geophysical Union v. Texaco Inc., 60 F.3d 913, 918 (2d Cir.1995);
Columbia Pictures Ind. v. Miramax Films Corp., 11 F.Supp.2d 1179, 1187
(C.D.Cal.1998) ("[b]ecause fair use is an affirmative defense, Defendants bear
the burden of proof on all of its factors"). Based on an analysis of the factors, the
Court finds there is fair use here.
1. Purpose and Character Of The
Use
The first factor considers the
nature of the use, including whether the use is commercial or educational. This, however, does not end the
inquiry. "Purpose and character"
also involve an assessment of whether "the new work merely supersedes the
objects of the original creation, or instead adds something new, with a further
purpose or different character, altering the first with new expression, meaning,
or message; it asks, in other words, whether and to what extent the new work is
transformative." Campbell v.
Acuff-Rose Music, 510 U.S. 569, 579, 114 S.Ct. 1164, 127 L.Ed.2d 500 (1994)
(citation omitted). "[T]he more
transformative the new work, the less will be the significance of other *1119 factors, like commercialism, that may
weigh against a finding of fair use."
Id. at 579, 114 S.Ct. 1164.
There is no dispute Defendant operates its Web site for commercial
purposes. Plaintiff's images,
however, did not represent a significant element of that commerce, nor were they
exploited in any special way. (FN5)
They were reproduced as a result of Defendant's generally indiscriminate
method of gathering images.
Defendant has a commercial interest in developing a comprehensive
thumbnail index so it can provide more complete results to users of its search
engine. The Ditto crawler is
designed to obtain large numbers of images from numerous sources without seeking
authorization. (FN6) Plaintiff's
images were indexed as a result of these methods. While the use here was commercial, it
was also of a somewhat more incidental and less exploitative nature than more
traditional types of "commercial use." (FN7)
The most significant factor favoring Defendant is the transformative
nature of its use of Plaintiff's images.
Defendant's use is very different from the use for which the images were
originally created. Plaintiff's
photographs are artistic works used for illustrative purposes. Defendant's visual search engine is
designed to catalog and improve access to images on the Internet. Joint Stip. pp 27-29, 32. The character of the thumbnail index is
not esthetic, but functional; its purpose is not to be artistic, but to be
comprehensive.
To
a lesser extent, the Arriba Vista image attributes page also served this purpose
by allowing users to obtain more details about an image. The image attributes page, however,
raises other concerns. It allowed
users to view (and potentially download) full-size images without necessarily
viewing the rest of the originating Web page. At the same time, it was less clearly
connected to the search engine's purpose of finding and organizing Internet
content for users. The presence of
the image attributes page in the old version of the search engine somewhat
detracts from the transformative effect of the search engine. But, when considering purpose and
character of use in a new enterprise of this sort, it is more appropriate to
consider the transformative purpose rather than the early imperfect means of
achieving that purpose. The Court
finds the purpose and character of Defendant's use was on the whole
significantly transformative.
The
Court finds the first factor weighs in favor of fair use.
2. Nature of the Copyrighted
Work
The
second factor in s 107 is an acknowledgment "that some works are closer to the
core of intended copyright protection than others, with the consequence that
fair use is more difficult to establish when *1120 the former works are copied." Campbell, supra 510 U.S. at 586,
114 S.Ct. 1164. Artistic works like
Plaintiff's photographs are part of that core. The Court finds the second factor weighs
against fair use.
3. Amount And Substantiality of
the Portion Used
The
third fair use factor assesses whether the amount copied was "reasonable in
relation to the purpose of the copying."
Id. The analysis focuses on "the persuasiveness of a [copier's]
justification for the particular copying done, and the inquiry will harken back
to the first of the statutory factors, for ... the extent of permissible copying
varies with the purpose and character of the use." Id. at 586-F87, 114 S.Ct.
1164.
In
the thumbnail index, Defendant used Plaintiff's images in their entirety, but
reduced them in size. Defendant
argues it is necessary for a visual search engine to copy images in their
entirety so users can be sure of recognizing them, and the reduction in size and
resolution mitigates damage that might otherwise result from copying. As Defendant has illustrated in its
brief, thumbnails cannot be enlarged into useful images. Defendant's Memo of P & A, at 3. Use
of partial images or images further reduced in size would make images difficult
for users to identify, and would eliminate the usefulness of Defendant's search
engine as a means of categorizing and improving access to Internet
resources.
As
with the first factor, the Arriba Vista image attributes page presents a greater
problem because it displayed a full-size image separated from the surrounding
content on its originating Web page.
Image attributes (e.g. dimensions and the address of the originating
site) could have been displayed without reproducing the full-size image, and the
display of the full image was not necessary to the main purposes of the search
engine. (FN8)
If
only the thumbnail index were at issue, Defendant's copying would likely be
reasonable in light of its purposes.
The image attributes page, however, was more remotely related to the
purposes of the search engine. The
Court finds the third factor weighs slightly against fair
use.
4. Effect of the Use On The
Potential Market or Value
The
fourth factor inquiry examines the direct impact of the defendant's use and also
considers "whether unrestricted and widespread conduct of the sort engaged in by
the defendant ... would result in a substantially adverse impact on the
potential market for the original."
Campbell, supra, 510 U.S. at 590, 114 S.Ct. 1164 (citation
omitted).
The
relevant market is Plaintiff's Web sites as a whole. The photographs are used to promote the
products sold by Plaintiff's Web sites (including Plaintiff's books and
corporate tour packages) and draw users to view the additional advertisements
posted on those Web sites. The
fourth factor addresses not just the potential market for a particular photo,
but also its "value." The value of
Plaintiff's photographs to Plaintiff could potentially be adversely affected if
their promotional purposes are undermined.
Defendant
argues there is no likely negative impact because its search engine does not
compete with Plaintiff's Web sites and actually increases the number of users
finding their way to those sites.
Plaintiff
argues the market for his various products has been harmed. Defendant's conduct created a
possibility that some users might improperly copy and use Plaintiff's images
from Defendant's site. Defendant's
search engine also enabled users to "deep link" directly to the pages containing
retrieved images, and thereby bypass the "front page" of the originating Web
site. As a result, these users
would be *1121 less likely to view all of the
advertisements on the Web sites or view the Web site's entire promotional
message. However, Plaintiff has
shown no evidence of any harm or adverse impact.
In
the absence of any evidence about traffic to Plaintiff's Web sites or effects on
Plaintiff's businesses, the Court cannot find any market harm to Plaintiff. The Defendant has met its burden of
proof by offering evidence tending to show a lack of market harm, and Plaintiff
has not refuted that evidence. The
Court finds the fourth factor weighs in favor of fair use.
5. Conclusion--Fair
Use
The
Court finds two of the four factors weigh in favor of fair use, and two weigh
against it. The first and fourth
factors (character of use and lack of market harm) weigh in favor of a fair use
finding because of the established importance of search engines and the
"transformative" nature of using reduced versions of images to organize and
provide access to them. The second
and third factors (creative nature of the work and amount or substantiality of
copying) weigh against fair use.
The
first factor of the fair use test is the most important in this case. Defendant never held Plaintiff's work
out as its own, or even engaged in conduct specifically directed at Plaintiff's
work. Plaintiff's images were swept
up along with two million others available on the Internet, as part of
Defendant's efforts to provide its users with a better way to find images on the
Internet. Defendant's purposes were
and are inherently transformative, even if its realization of those purposes was
at times imperfect. Where, as here,
a new use and new technology are evolving, the broad transformative purpose of
the use weighs more heavily than the inevitable flaws in its early stages of
development.
The
Court has weighed all of the s 107 factors together. The Court finds Defendant's conduct
constituted fair use of Plaintiff's images. There is no triable issue of material
fact remaining to be resolved on the question of fair use, and summary
adjudication is appropriate.
Defendant's motion is GRANTED and Plaintiff's motion is DENIED as to the
copyright infringement claims.
B.
Digital Millennium Copyright Act
Enacted
on October 28, 1998, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) implements two
earlier World Intellectual Property Organization treaties. Section 1202 of the DMCA governs
"integrity of copyright management information." (FN9) Section 1202(a) prohibits falsification
of copyright management information with the intent to aid copyright
infringement. Section 1202(b)
prohibits, unless authorized, several forms of knowing removal or alteration of
copyright management information. (FN10)
Section 1203 creates a federal civil action for violations of these
provisions.
Plaintiff
argues Defendant violated s 1202(b) by displaying thumbnails of *1122 Plaintiff's images without displaying
the corresponding copyright management information consisting of standard
copyright notices in the surrounding text.
Joint Stip. of Facts, pp 64-69.
Because these notices do not appear in the images themselves, the Ditto
crawler did not include them when it indexed the images. (FN11) Id. p 70. As a result, the images appeared in
Defendant's index without the copyright management information, and any users
retrieving Plaintiff's images while using Defendant's Web site would not see the
copyright management information.
Section
1202(b)(1) does not apply to this case.
Based on the language and structure of the statute, the Court holds this
provision applies only to the removal of copyright management information on a
plaintiff's product or original work.
Moreover, even if s 1202(b)(1) applied, Plaintiff has not offered any
evidence showing Defendant's actions were intentional, rather than
merely
an unintended side effect of the Ditto crawler's
operation.
Here,
where the issue is the absence of copyright management information from copies
of Plaintiff's works, the applicable provision is s 1202(b)(3). To show a violation of that section,
Plaintiff must show Defendant makes available to its users the thumbnails and
full-size images, which were copies of Plaintiff's work separated from their
copyright management information, even though it knows or should know this will
lead to infringement of Plaintiff's copyrights. There is no dispute the Ditto crawler
removed Plaintiff's images from the context of Plaintiff's Web sites where their
copyright management information was located, and converted them to thumbnails
in Defendant's index. There is also
no dispute the Arriba Vista search engine allowed full-size images to be viewed
without their copyright management information.
Defendant's
users could obtain a full-sized version of a thumbnailed image by clicking on
the thumbnail. A user who did this
was given the name of the Web site from which Defendant obtained the image,
where any associated copyright management information would be available, and an
opportunity to link there. (FN12)
Users were also informed on Defendant's Web site that use restrictions
and copyright limitations may apply to images retrieved by Defendant's search
engine. (FN13)
Based
on all of this, the Court finds Defendant did not have "reasonable grounds to
know" it would cause its users to infringe Plaintiff's copyrights. Defendant warns its users about the
possibility of use restrictions on the images in its index, and instructs them
to check with the originating Web sites before copying and using those images,
even in reduced thumbnail form.
Plaintiff's
images are vulnerable to copyright infringement because they are displayed on
Web sites. Plaintiff has not shown
users of Defendant's site were any more likely to infringe his copyrights, any
of these users did infringe, or Defendant should reasonably have expected
infringement.
*1123.
There
is no genuine issue of material fact requiring a trial on Plaintiff's DMCA
claims, and summary adjudication is appropriate. The Court finds there was no violation
of DMCA s 1202. Defendant's motion
is GRANTED and Plaintiff's motion is DENIED on the DMCA
claim.
FN1.
This full-size image was not technically located on Defendant's Web site. It was displayed by opening a link to
its originating Web page. But only
the image itself, and not any other part of the originating Web page, was
displayed on the image attributes page.
From the user's perspective, the source of the image matters less than
the context in which it is displayed.
FN2.
Defendant's current search engine, ditto.com, operates in a slightly different
manner. When a ditto.com user
clicks on a thumbnail, two windows open simultaneously. One window contains the full-size image;
the other contains the originating Web page in full.
FN3.
Images are briefly stored in full on Defendant's server until the thumbnail is
made; they are then deleted. Joint
Stip. p 32. There is no claim that
Defendant provides any access to the full-sized images during this
period.
FN4.
Defendant's request for judicial notice of a Nature article, and Plaintiff's
objection to the request, are both inappropriate. The parties have already included this
article as Exhibit 5 to their Joint Stipulation of Facts.
FN5.
The use in this case is commercial, but it is unusual and less serious than many
other commercial uses. If, for
example, Plaintiff's images were used without authorization in advertising for
Defendant's Web site, a finding of fair use would be much less
likely.
FN6.
The parties argue at length about the possibility of blocking the Ditto crawler
from a Web site by use of a "robots.txt" file or other methods. Defendant posted instructions on its Web
site for blocking the Ditto crawler in March, after Plaintiff's images had
already been indexed. Plaintiff's
Web sites have never used any of these blocking methods. Joint Stip. p 34. The Ditto crawler has, in the past,
apparently visited sites that were supposed to be blocked. Plaintiff argues this is evidence of bad
faith by Defendant and suggests the fair use defense should as a result be
precluded. The record shows
Defendant made efforts to correct problems of this sort when it became aware of
them, and did not act in bad faith.
FN7.
Defendant also sought to promote a now-discontinued software product called
Arriba Express. Arriba Express
allowed users to "vacuum" an entire originating Web site and store it on their
computers simply by pointing at a thumbnail. Joint Stip. p 45-50, Exh. 18. The images would be stored along with
all content from the originating Web site.
Arriba Express served a function related to that of the search engine,
and Defendant's promotion of it represents a related type of "commercial
use."
FN8.
The newer search engine, ditto.com, appears to lessen this problem by
eliminating the image attributes page and simultaneously opening the originating
Web page along with a full-size image.
FN9.
"Copyright management information" is defined, in relevant part,
as:
[A]ny of the following information
conveyed in connection with copies ... of a work ... or displays of a work,
including in digital form ...:
(1)
The title and other information identifying the work, including the information
set forth on a notice of copyright.
(2)
The name of, and other identifying information about, the author of a
work.
(3)
The name of, and other identifying information about, the copyright owner of the
work, including the information set forth in a
notice
of copyright.
17
U.S.C. s 1202(c).
FN10.
Section 1202(b) provides, in relevant part,
No
person shall, without the authority of the copyright owner or the
law--
(1)
intentionally remove or alter any copyright management
information,
(3)
distribute ... copies of works ... knowing that copyright management information
has been removed or altered without authority
of
the copyright owner or the law, knowing, or, with respect to civil remedies
under section 1203, having reasonable grounds to
know,
that it will induce, enable, facilitate, or conceal an infringement of any right
under [federal copyright law].
FN11.
There was one exception--a version of the "Shasta Rainbow" image obtained by the
Ditto crawler from a third-party Web site.
The copyright notice for that image was incorporated into the image
itself (fine print along the edge of the picture). See Joint Stip., pp 72-73. Plaintiff's allegations of DMCA
violations are inapplicable to this image.
FN12.
Through Defendant's current search engine, ditto.com, the user can no longer
open a full-sized image without also opening the site where its copyright
management information is located.
*1123
FN13.
Plaintiff argues Defendant's warnings are insufficient because they do not
appear with the thumbnail images on the search result pages produced by the
search engine. The Arriba Vista Web
site only offered a warning if users clicked on a link to its "Copyright"
page. This warning may arguably
have been placed in the wrong place to deter some potential copyright
infringers. But this does not
necessarily mean Defendant "knew" or "should have known" for the purposes of a
DMCA violation, especially since Plaintiff offers no evidence of any actual
copyright infringement about which Defendant "should have
known."