Saturday, 02 October 2010 05:05
After Ten Years, Round Two Of The Legal Battle Over Internet TV Is Here
Editor’s Note: The following is a guest post by Matthew Scherb, an attorney at the San Francisco office of Winston & Strawn LLP. He litigates complex copyright, trademark, and Internet-related disputes.
In 2000, the now-defunct iCraveTV allowed its users to watch live television over the Internet. It retransmitted broadcast television without obtaining permission from or paying broadcasters, framed the retransmission with paid advertisements, and users watched while paying nothing. A federal court in Pennsylvania found iCraveTV was likely on the hook for copyright infringement. iCraveTV shut down, and the court’s decision appears to have had a blanket chilling effect on Internet-based television. No one came along to take iCraveTV’s place.
Fast forward to 2010: Seattle-based ivi has arrived. Like iCraveTV, ivi lets you watch live television on the Internet. Also like iCraveTV, ivi has not sought permission from or paid broadcasters. Unlike iCraveTV, there is no paid advertising: ivi draws revenue from a flat monthly fee. For a premium, ivi offers DVR “time sifting” features such as pause, rewind, and fast forward. ivi currently streams programs from New York and Seattle affiliates of ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, and a few other networks. So, next Thursday you could watch an episode of The Office as it airs on WNBC (an NBC station in New York) or, next month catch Major League Baseball’s World Series on KCPQ (a Fox station in Seattle). You might cheer the return of Internet television. You might be glad to see a potential competitor to your cable or satellite provider. But does ivi’s retransmission of broadcast television run afoul of copyright law? Will it face the same fate as iCraveTV?
We may soon find out.
In mid-September, broadcasters and copyright owners (including the major networks and Major League Baseball) sent ivi a cease-and-desist letter. They accused ivi of copyright infringement and demanded that ivi stop streaming their television programs. Fearing a lawsuit from its accusers, ivi preemptively filed a lawsuit in Seattle federal court on Monday, September 20. ivi seeks an order declaring that its Internet television service is legal. In quick response, the broadcaster and copyright owners filed their own lawsuit against ivi in New York federal court on September 28. If ivi wins or obtains a favorable settlement in these cases before it runs out of money, it can proceed with a stamp of approval from a federal judge or from its accusers. A loss could torpedo its ambitions.
ivi has pegged its legal hopes on a rarely-invoked but potentially powerful exception to copyright liability: the “passive carrier exemption.” The exemption makes it lawful to retransmit a transmission intended for the public so long as the retransmitter lacks control over the content of the original transmission or over the recipients of the retransmission. ivi believes that by retransmitting freely-available, over-the-air broadcasts and offering basic DVR-like services, it is nothing more than a passive carrier and exempt from copyright liability.
The iCraveTV case never dealt with the passive carrier exemption. Because iCraveTV framed its retransmissions with advertisements, it probably could not have claimed the passive carrier exemption in any event: by adding advertisements, it was arguably modifying and exercising control over the original broadcast transmission.
Major court decisions involving the passive carrier exemption are, like the iCraveTV case, also a decade old. They offer mixed signals.
In 1999, the same New York federal court now hearing the broadcasters’ and copyright owners’ lawsuit against ivi denied the exemption to a company called Media Dial-Up. Media Dial-Up retransmitted radio broadcasts via telephone to its customers who paid a fee for access. Even though Media Dial-Up did not control the content of the radio broadcasts or limit reception to particular individuals, the court refused to classify Media Dial-Up as a “carrier.” ”In an era of rapid technological change,” the court wrote, “possibilities for the capture and retransmission of copyrighted material over the Internet . . . are enormous.” If Media Dial-Up could be a passive carrier, it “would threaten considerable mischief.” The court called this “common sense.”
Just two years later, in 2001, a Massachusetts court reached the opposite result. It applied the exemption to Insight, a company that facilitated retransmission of Boston-area television broadcasts, including National Football League games, to Bell Canada for a fee. It noted that Congress had intended courts to give “carrier” an “expansive” definition.
Will ivi distinguish itself from iCraveTV and Media Dial-Up and align itself with Insight?
If it can, ivi will have succeeded in making the passive carrier exception a powerful shield for itself and others, perhaps other Internet retransmitters such as Ustream or Justin.tv looking to offer new services or cable and satellite retransmitters looking to make the leap to the Internet.
As for television broadcasters, though they may prefer to control the market for Internet television themselves, they may actually benefit financially from having their broadcasts retransmitted on the Internet and other media. They will reach more eyeballs and could presumably demand higher advertising fees.
Stay tuned for the court’s decisions and also keep an eye on Congress, which can revoke or modify the passive carrier exception. Congress created special, compulsory licensing regimes for cable and satellite retransmitters as those technologies matured. Cable and satellite retransmitters do not infringe copyright when they retransmit a television broadcast, but they must pay a royalty fixed by statute. Congress could choose to impose a similar regime on Internet retransmitters.
View this document on Scribd
View this document on Scribd
CrunchBase InformationWinston & StrawnInformation provided by CrunchBase
0
0
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
7
7Authors: Guest Author
Read 15838 times
Published in
News Technologique-Tech News
Last WebBuzz
-
WebBuzz du 24/11/2017: Pérou décoller comme superman-Peru Reverse bungee aka Superman Jump
Read 38442 times
-
WebBuzz du 22/11/2017: Une Femme Saoudienne fait du surf dans les rues-Saudi girl Car Surfing after heavy rains and flood in Saudi Arabia
Read 38728 times
-
WebBuzz du 20/11/2017: Maxi crach au grand prix GT à Macau-Huge pile up Crash 2017 Macau Grand Prix FIA GT World Cup
Read 33614 times
-
WebBuzz du 17/11/2017: Boston Dynamics fait le cirque avec ses robots-BD prepare to build a circus with his robots
Read 36386 times
-
WebBuzz du 16/11/2017: Une illusion d'optique féminine-a feminine optical illusion
Read 34434 times
-
WebBuzz du 14/11/2017: Roumanie un bus de police évite un tram de justesse-Close call between a tram and police's bus
Read 30999 times
-
WebBuzz du 13/11/2017: Arrivée fracassante d'un bateau sur les docks de San Diego-Whale Watching Boat Crashing Into San Diego Dock
Read 29220 times
-
WebBuzz du 08/11/2017: Créer des flammes de toutes les couleurs-How to make colourful flames
Read 30036 times
-
WebBuzz du 07/11/2017: Echec test du système de détection des piètons de la Volvo S60-Volvo S60 Pedestrian Detection System Test failed
Read 31401 times
-
WebBuzz du 03/11/2017: Slacker dans la forêt-slackline in the forest
Read 33888 times
Accusé de reception
bancaires
bilan
cheval
configuration
Confirmation de lecture
copie
copies
Dolibarr
duplicata
EDF
Excel
exim
facture
factures
Firefox
Google cloud print
hameçonnage
IE6
IE7
impression
informatique
itunes
java
linux
luxembourgeois
mac os
MAJ
micosoft
microsoft
Office
Outlook
phishing
quicktime
rappels
relances
seamonkey
serveurs
spécifique
Sécurité
Tentative
thunderbird
troie
utilisant
V322
Vista
Windows
Windows 7
XP/2000 : Activer le pavé numérique
établissements