______________________________
Guest post by Stephen Carlisle of Nova Southeastern University
The latest twist in the never ending saga of the “Dancing Baby” case hit the dance floor on May 5, 2017. On that date, the U.S. Solicitor General responded to the Supreme Court of the United States’ request last October for guidance on whether it should take up the case of Lenz v. Universal Music Group. 1 The case was subject of two Petitions for Certiorari, one from each side. Universal’s had already been denied. 2 In case you are unfamiliar with the case, this blog has written about it before, and you can read up on it. 3The brief itself is a bit of a shock. 4 It contends that not only did the 9th Circuit get it wrong, but everybody got it wrong. On top of that, not only did everyone get it spectacularly wrong, but the SCOTUS should not fix it by taking up the case.It’s broke, but don’t fix it? How did we get there?Here is the question presented by the SCOTUS:“A separate provision [of the Copyright Act] allows a user to recover damages from a copyright owner that ‘knowingly materially misrepresents’ in such a notification that material ‘is infringing.’ 17 U.S.C. 512(f). The question presented is as follows:Whether a copyright owner may be held liable un-der Section 512(f) for sending a notification of claimed infringement based on a sincere but unreasonable belief that the challenged material is infringing.” 5In the lower court and on appeal, the arguments surrounded what and how much a person sending a DMCA takedown should consider whether the defense of fair use is present. The 9th Circuit held that:“We conclude that because 17 U.S.C. § 107 created a type of non-infringing use, fair use is ‘authorized by the law’ and a copyright holder must consider the existence of fair use before sending a takedown notification under § 512(c).” 6This was tempered by the following language which rolled back how searching or intensive the consideration should be:“If, however, a copyright holder forms a subjective good faith belief the allegedly infringing material does not constitute fair use, we are in no position to dispute the copyright holder’s belief even if we would have reached the opposite conclusion.” 7That’s not correct, says the Solicitor General. According to the SG, there is no “good faith” requirement in 512(f), and you can’t “read it in” or “imply it in” as the Electronic Frontier Foundation contended throughout the case.“This case has been litigated as a dispute about the meaning of 17 U.S.C. 512(c)(3)(A)(v), which provides that a takedown notice must include a statement that the copyright owner has a ‘good faith belief’ that the challenged conduct is unauthorized. But Section 512(c)(3)(A)(v) does not define the mental state required for liability under Section 512(f ). That requirement appears in Section 512(f) itself, which states that a copyright owner is liable only if it ‘knowingly materially misrepresents under this section * * * that material or activity is infringing.’ Neither the parties nor the court below have focused on that controlling statutory text.” 8So, in the mind of the SG’s office, the “good faith belief” test goes completely out the window. You can only get tagged under 512 (f) if you actually knew the material was fair use, and not infringing, or if you were willfully blind to facts that would have demonstrated the use to be a fair use. 9 And here’s the kicker that is sure to give the EFF heartburn:“A negligent or unreasonable misrepresentation of infringement is not sufficient.” 10The SG’s opinion tracks through the other portions of the Copyright Act, where the standard is less than actual knowledge:- Knowing or having reasonable grounds to know: Section 1202(b)(3)
- Was not aware and had no reasonable grounds to know: Section 1203(c)(5)(A)
- Decision does not conflict with that of any other Circuit.
- Decision is interlocutory in nature. The trail Court denied both motion for summary judgement and the case never went to trial, thus no final judgement to appeal from.
- The case has been litigated by all sides under a mistaken belief of law, namely that 512(f) required a “good faith belief” rather than “knowing material misrepresentation.”
- Neither party addresses the “controlling statutory language” in their filings before the SCOTUS.
- U.S. Supreme Court Wants Government’s Take on Copyright Takedown Case
- Id.
- Let’s Not Go Crazy Here: The Dancing Baby and Fair Use
- Stephanie Lenz, Petitioner v. Universal Music Corp., et al.
- Id. at (I)
- Lenz v. Universal Music Group 815 F.3d 1145 (9th Cir.) 2015 at 1153
- Id. at 1154
- Id. at 10
- Id. at 11
- Id.
- Id. at 14
- Id. at 15
- Id. at 17
- Id. at 19
- Id. at 21
- Id. at 22
Related articles





