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Guest post by Attorney Stephen Carlisle of Nova Southeastern UniversityFreedom of speech is not freedom from speech. Anyone who voluntarily puts themselves up in a public forum, and expounds on an issue, should expect to get pushback from those who disagree.Never is this more apparent than with the internet. People wish to (and do) spout off on any number of subjects, but act all wounded in hurt when they themselves are criticized. Therefore, the remedy is to spout off under an assumed name or anonymously. Indeed, there are whole businesses whose “service” is hiding the identities of people on the internet. 1Personally, I take much less seriously anything written under anything other than the authors true name. My name is on every piece that I write. I do so fully expecting that I am going to get slagged by people who disagree with me. Indeed, someone (who used a username) called me “a f*ckin’ moron” on Reddit. Goes with the territory.Which brings us to the case of Signature Management Team, LLC v. Doe. 2Defendant Doe apparently has beef with “multi-level marketing companies” and criticizes them on a website called “Amthrax,” 3 an obvious dig at Amway. For whatever reason, Doe refuses to put his own name on his blog posts.Doe was sued by Team, not for defamation, but for copyright infringement. He posted a hyperlink to the complete text of Team’s copyrighted work “The Team Builders Textbook.” 4 A DMCA notice was served on Automattic, Inc., the webhost, and the link was removed. 5 Team followed with the lawsuit, not seeking damages, but for injunctive relief and seeking an order revealing Doe’s identity. 6Doe, in turn, claimed (all together now) fair use. How the posting the entirety of a lengthy copyrighted work online, even if you are critical of it, constitutes fair use is a truly aggressive assertion, especially where the fair use section of the copyright act contemplates only a “portion” of the work being used. 7Doe also asserted he has a First Amendment right to speak anonymously, and therefore his identity should not be disclosed.There is absolutely no doubt that Doe has a first amendment right to speak anonymously. 8The problem is that copyright infringement is not protected speech under the First Amendment.“The First Amendment does not…provide a license for copyright infringement…Thus to the extent anonymity is used to mask copyright infringement or to facilitate such infringement by other persons, it is unprotected by the First Amendment.” 9So, if Doe’s fair use defense fails, so should his right to remain anonymous.The District Court rejected Doe’s fair use defense, but refused to order that his identity be disclosed to Team. Team’s lawyers were allowed to know his identity, but could not pass this information on to Team itself. 10Team appealed and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed in a split decision.The majority opinion takes the position that the right of public access to court records largely trumps Doe’s right to remain anonymous.“[W]e hold that like the general presumption in favor of open judicial records, there is also a presumption in favor of unmasking anonymous defendants when judgement has been entered for a Plaintiff.” 11- Cloudflare: The “Now You See Me, Now You Don’t” of the Internet ↩
- 2017 WL 5710571 Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals 2017 ↩
- Id. at 1 ↩
- Id. ↩
- Id. ↩
- Id. ↩
- 17 USC 107 ↩
- McIntyre v.Ohio Elections Commission 514 U.S. 334 (1995) ↩
- Arista Records LLC v. Doe 3 604 F.3d 110. 118 Second Circuit 2010 ↩
- 2017 WL 5710571 at 2 ↩
- Id. at 4 ↩
- Id. ↩
- Id. at 5 ↩
- Id. at 6-7 ↩
- Id. at 7 ↩