|
RECENT
DEVELOPMENTS IN INTERNET LAW
Rob Hassett
Suellen
W. Bergman
Hassett
Cohen Goldstein & Port, LLP
990 Hammond
Drive, Suite 990
Atlanta, GA
30328
(770) 393-0990
http://www.internetlegal.com
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The writers wish to thank Robert Port,
a partner in the above law firm, and Lori Brill, an associate in the above
law firm, for their help in preparing these materials.
I. Introduction
Over the past year, courts, Congress, and state legislatures
have dealt with a number of different issues concerning the Internet,
including:
1. The enforceability of agreements entered into
over the Internet;
2. Spam;
3. Under what circumstances is there liability for
copying?
4. How far will the courts go to restrict the use
of marks as domain names, metatags and other uses on the Internet?
5. What privacy rules apply?
6. What is a Web site operators
liability for a Web site which involves activity that is legitimate
in some jurisdictions, but illegal in others?
These and other recent developments are
discussed in this paper.
II.
What constitutes an enforceable agreement entered into over the Internet?
Agreements entered into over the Internet
generally take one of two forms, either an exchange of e-mail or clickwrap.
Clickwrap agreements are agreements formed by a purchaser manifesting
assent to the terms of an agreement online by pointing and clicking a
mouse. An agreement based on an exchange of e-mails relating to subject
matter which does not require a signed writing to be enforceable has been
held to be effective. See, e.g., CompuServe, Inc. v.
Richard S. Patterson, 89 F.3d 1257 (6th Cir. 1996). The controversies
regarding the enforceability of agreements entered into over the Internet
involve the enforceability of clickwrap agreements and whether agreements
entered into over the Internet constitute signed writings.
A. Clickwrap Agreements
The authors are not aware of any cases
to date that directly address the issue of whether clickwrap agreements
are enforceable. There is one case that implicitly holds that they
are enforceable. A number of cases deal with whether shrinkwrap agreements
(which we believe provide a useful legal analogy) are enforceable.
The most important issue addressed by courts today regarding the enforceability
of shrinkwrap agreements is whether or not shrinkwrap agreements are
pre-empted by copyright law.
1. The case that implicitly held
that clickwrap licenses are enforceable is Hotmail Corp. v. Van
Money Pie, Inc., (N.D. Cal. 1998) 47 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1020
(1998); 1998 U.S. Dist. Lexis 10729 (April 16, 1998). In that case,
the United States District Court for the Northern District of California
granted the plaintiff a preliminary injunction in a case alleging
that the defendants breached the terms of a service contract for
using the plaintiffs e-mail service. Without discussing the
issue, the Court in that case implicitly held that the defendants
were obligated to the terms of service on the Hotmail Web site.
Users of that service agreed to those terms by clicking the "I
agree" button.
2. In ProCD, Inc., v. Zeidenberg,
86 F.3rd 1447 (7th Cir. 1996), ProCD developed and sold copies of
a CD ROM containing a database of telephone numbers. The CD ROM
box informed the consumers there was a shrinkwrap license inside
the box. The shrinkwrap license provided that the purchaser was
only receiving a license and the purchaser could not make copies
of the product. Zeidenberg copied the database onto his own Web
site and then provided access to the database via his Web site to
customers for a fee. The Court rejected the holding of Vault
Corp. v. Quaid Software Ltd., 847 F.2d 255 (5th Cir. 1988),
that shrinkwrap licenses are pre-empted by copyright law, and held
that the ProCD shrinkwrap license was enforceable.(1) The
Court thus provided a way for database developers to protect their
databases (by contract) even though copyright law would probably
not protect the database here. (2)
a. Several courts have followed
the ProCD decision: Microstar v. Formgen, Inc.,
942 F. Supp. 1312 (S.D. Cal. 1996) (copying from a computer game);
Hill v. Gateway 2000, Inc., 105 F.3rd 1147 (7th Cir.),
cert. denied, 522 U.S. 808, 118 S.Ct. 47, 139 L.Ed.2d 13
(1997) (shrinkwrap license sent with a Gateway computer); Brower
v. Gateway 2000, Inc., 246 A.D.2d 246, 676 N.Y.S.2d 569, 37
U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (CBC) 54 (N.Y. App. Div. 1st Dep't 1998)
(allowed Gateway 2000 to require that any disputes be resolved
by arbitration in Chicago, Illinois); and Mortenson Co., Inc.
v. Timberline Software Corp., 93 Wash. App. 819, 831, 970
P.2d 803, 809 (1999) (upheld a shrinkwrap license agreement, included
in the software, which was fairly standard and contained an "accept-or-return"
provision).(3)
b. Note that Section 112 of the
Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act (UCITA), discussed
infra, would modify ProCD somewhat because UCITA
provides that where a mass-market purchaser licensee does not
have an opportunity to review a mass-market license or a copy
of it before becoming obligated to pay and does not agree, to
the license after having the opportunity to review it, the licensee
is entitled to return the product and (1) is entitled to reimbursement
of any reasonable expenses incurred in complying with the licensor's
instructions for return or destruction of the computer information
or, in the absence of instructions, incurred for return postage
or similar reasonable expense in returning it; and, in some circumstances,
(2) is entitled to compensation for any reasonable and foreseeable
costs of restoring the licensee's system. See UCITA Section
112.
A case which tangentially addressed
the shrinkwrap issue is Step-Saver Sys. v. Wyse Tech. and The
Software Link, 939 F.2d 91 (3rd Cir. 1991), where the Court
applied the "battle of the forms" rules and determined
that the parties agreement was complete when the goods were
ordered via telephone coupled with the purchase order. The Court
held that the shrinkwrap license was sent after the fact and thus
had no effect. The Software Link's shrinkwrap license was also
held unenforceable for the same reason in Arizona Retail Sys.,
Inc. v. The Software Link, 831 F. Supp. 759 (D. Ariz. 1993).
3. Generally, it appeared that the
copyright pre-emption barrier raised in Vault Corp., supra,
had been buried by ProCD and its progeny. However, in a case
involving claims relating to the pitching of a marketing concept
(which did not involve any kind of online agreement but could have
repercussions in the online context), the United States District
Court for the Western District of Michigan held that the claim was
pre-empted by copyright law. See Wrench, LLC v. Taco Bell
Corp., 51 F. Supp. 2d 840 (W.D. Mich. 1999), 51 U.S.P.Q.2d (BNA)
1238. The Court denied the claim of a company that had pitched the
Chihuahua concept to Taco Bell and claimed Taco Bell used the concept
without paying for it. The Court held that any implied contract
was pre-empted by copyright law. The Court distinguished ProCD
on the somewhat nebulous grounds that the ProCD agreement was in
effect at the time of purchase (i.e. before use of the product)
whereas the Taco Bell agreement was not supposed to take effect
unless Taco Bell started using the Chihuahua concept (i.e. after
use of the concept). Note that use or copying of a product (i.e.
a copyrighted item) is the same action which triggers liability
under copyright law. This case is in line with an earlier Louisiana
case regarding shrinkwrap licenses: Vault Corp., supra.
B. Signed Writings
Both clickwrap agreements and e-mail
exchanges may cover transactions where signed writings are required
under the applicable statute of frauds. A number of states now have
some kind of a digital signature act. Most of these acts require that,
to satisfy any statute of frauds, the electronic signature must be:
1. Unique to the person using it,
2. Capable of verification, and
3. Under the sole control of the
person using it.
See, e.g., Georgia
Electronic and Signatures Act at O.C.G.A. §10-12-3 et seq. as
originally enacted; the Utah Digital Signatures Act, Utah Code
Ann. §46-3-101, et seq. (Supp. 1996). Before the enactment of
O.C.G.A. §10-12-3 et seq., an argument could be made in Georgia
that anything intended to be a signature would constitute a signature.
See, e.g., Troutt v. Nash AMC-Jeep, Inc.,
157 Ga. App. 399, 278 S.E.2d 54 (1981), which held that the printing
of a company name at the bottom of a form constituted a signature,
permitting a car dealer to meet certain state law requirements
of providing a signed form. The latest developments in this area
are discussed below.
1. The newest version of Georgias
statute, (4) Electronic Records and Signatures,
which provides for broad acceptance of electronic signatures, reads,
in pertinent part, as follows:
(a) Records and signatures shall
not be denied legal effect or validity solely on the grounds that
they are electronic.
(b) In any legal proceeding, an
electronic record or electronic signature shall not be inadmissible
as evidence solely on the basis that it is electronic.
(c) When a rule of law requires
a writing, an electronic record satisfies that rule of law.
(d) When a rule of law requires
a signature, an electronic signature satisfies that rule of law.
(e) When a rule of law requires
an original record or signature, an electronic record or electronic
signature shall satisfy such rule of law.
(f) Nothing in this Code section
shall prevent a party from contesting an electronic record or
signature on the basis of fraud.
O.C.G.A. §10-12-4 provides further
as follows:
The term "electronic signature"
is defined as "a signature created, transmitted, received,
or stored by electronic means and includes but is not limited
to a secure electronic signature."(5) O.C.G.A.
§10-12-3. The term "record" is defined as "information
created, transmitted, received, or stored either in human perceivable
form or in a form that is retrievable in human perceivable form."
O.C.G.A. §10-12-3.
2. The proposed Uniform Electronic
Transactions Act (UETA), which provides that "an electronic
record or signature may not be denied legal effect or enforceability
solely because it is in electronic form" and that "if
a law requires a record to be in writing, an electronic record satisfies
the law"(6) has been approved by the National
Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, and the Conference
has voted to present the Act to states for adoption. (7)
The Electronic Transactions Act
has been passed in California. Californias Governor signed
the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act on September 16, 1999,
and it was chaptered (Chapter No. 428) by the Secretary of State
on the same date. See CA S.B. 820.
3. The Uniform Computer Information
Transactions Act (former proposed UCC Article 2B). The legal rules
for computer information transactions which was to be promulgated
by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws
(8) as Article 2B of the Uniform Commercial Code,
instead is being proposed as the Uniform Computer Information Transactions
Act (UCITA).(9) The Act is the first general commercial
statute to provide comprehensive procedures and rules for computer
software licensing. Most of those rules would also be appropriate
for a broad range of transactions outside UCITAs scope, and
it is expected that they will form the model for several future
articles of the UCC as they did for the Uniform Electronic Transactions
Act (UETA), which was approved at the same time.(10)
The provisions include:
an express recognition of electronic
records as the equivalent of writings, rules for attribution of
electronically generated messages, methods for establishing authentication,
rules for allocating losses caused by electronic errors, and rules
for determining when electronic messages are deemed to be effective.
A particularly noteworthy provision recognizes the enforceability
of agreements made by the interaction of "electronic agents,"
even if no human was directly involved in either or both sides
of the "negotiation." (11)
Software publishers and computer
manufacturers strongly support UCITA, but it is as strongly opposed
by a wide range of groups. UCITA is controversial because:
UCITA represents a movement toward
licensing of information in its many forms and away from the sale
of copies as traditionally understood under copyright law. UCITA
would enforce the broad [consumer] use of "shrink-wrap"
and computer "click-on" licenses (called "mass-market
licenses" in UCITA). By licensing rather than selling something,
a vendor can wield more control of the downstream use of the product.
Placing new constraints on the use of information in mass-market
transactions can, in turn, constrain the use of information for
important public purposes such as democratic speech, education,
scientific research, and cultural exchange. Many believe that
UCITA fails to appreciate the strong public interest in prohibiting
new restrictions on information exchange.
The scope of UCITA is extremely
broad. "Computer information," under UCITA, includes
everything from copyrighted expression, such as stories, computer
programs, images, music and Web pages; to other traditional forms
of intellectual property such as patents, trade secrets, and trademarks;
to newer digital creations such as online databases and interactive
games. Although the statute claims to be limited to information
in electronic form, it allows other transactions to "opt-in"
to being governed by UCITA.
Many legal community commentators
are of the opinion that UCITA (or something like it) is not necessary
or, at least, it is premature. This view is based on the opinion
that existing common law and copyright law are developing appropriately
to handle the new types of information-based transactions emerging
in the information economy.
The American Law Institute (ALI),
consumer advocacy groups, libraries, and the Federal Trade Commission
have continued to criticize and/or oppose the UCITA proposal and
prior UCC 2B drafts, yet their concerns have not been addressed.
Instead, NCCUSL intends to push the UCITA proposal as quickly
as possible to state legislatures.
A Quick Look at the Uniform Computer
Information Transactions Act (UCITA), American Association of
Law Libraries: Washington Affairs, July 15, 1999.(12)
4. Ballas v. Tedesco, 41
F.Supp. 2d 531 (D.N.J. 1999). This case addresses the issue of whether
an exchange of e-mails can satisfy the requirement that assignments
of copyrights are not effective unless they are in writing and signed
by the transferor. See, Copyright Act §201(d). In this case,
Tedesco wanted to produce a CD of dance music for Ballas. Ballas
would pay Tedesco a fee for the musical arrangements and production
of the CD, and Ballas would have the exclusive right to manufacture
copies of the CD for sale. Negotiations, via e-mail, were unsuccessful,
and the parties did not agree on terms of the arrangement. The parties
agreed that the music content copyright belonged to the Defendant.
The Court enjoined the Plaintiff from making or selling the music
on the CD because the Court found that there was no valid assignment
of the copyright since there was no written assignment.
III.
Spam (13)
A. Spam cases
1. Hartford
House, Ltd. d/b/a/ Blue Mountain Arts v. Microsoft Corp., CV 778550,
Sup. Ct. Cal. Santa Clara County, 1998. Blue Mountain creates
and sends electronic greeting cards. In this lawsuit, Blue Mountain
charged that (1) Microsoft has a competing electronic greeting card
Internet site and (2) Microsoft distributed a trial version of Internet
Explorer which includes an e-mail filter that identifies Blue Mountains
cards as spam and sends them into a junk mail folder instead of sending
them to the intended recipient. On December 17, 1998, Judge Robert Baines
ordered Microsoft to provide Blue Mountain with the necessary information
to enable Blue Mountain to alter its e-mail notification messages and
greeting cards to ensure that they pass through Microsofts anti-spam
filtering tool in the beta version of Internet Explorer 5.0. (14)
2. Intel
v. Hamidi, Superior Court of California, County of Sacramento, Judge
John R. Lewis, April, 1999. Ken Hamidi was dismissed from
Intel in 1995. On six occasions between 1996 and 1998, he sent e-mail
messages to over 30,000 Intel employees, which detailed his opinion
of the companys abusive and discriminatory employment practices.
In April, 1999, Judge Lewis granted summary judgment to Intel, finding
that Hamidis messages trespassed on Intels proprietary computer
system and caused harm. This decision has been criticized (15)
because (1) although there was arguably no state action,(16)
Judge Lewis did not engage in any First Amendment analysis and (2) given
the serious purpose of Hamidis messages and the minimal harm they
caused to Intels computers, Hamidis free speech rights should
prevail over Intels property rights in a fair balancing test.
3.
The Tenth Circuit, in U.S. West v. FCC, 182 F.3d 1224 (10th Cir.
1999), held that U.S. West could not be blocked by an FCC rule from
using information obtained from customers regarding who the customers
called, and other similar data, for marketing to those individuals because
such prohibition was "a violation of the First Amendment."
The Court reasoned that such use constituted commercial speech, applied
the First Amendment commercial speech analysis, and held that the proposed
FCC rule was unconstitutional. The test (17) was as
follows:
First, determine whether
the commercial speech concerns lawful activity and is not misleading.
If so, the speech can only be restricted if:
(1) the government
has a substantial state interest in regulating the speech;
(2) the regulation
directly and materially advances that interest; and
(3) the regulation
is no more extensive than necessary to serve the governmental
interests.
Surprisingly, the Court
found that the rule was not narrowly tailored because it did not
do such things as allow phone customers to opt in or opt out (assuming
that there is a serious desire by telephone company customers to
have their personal calls tracked and used for marketing purposes).
This indicates that some anti-spam statutes may violate free speech
if they completely prohibit spam without considering other alternatives.
This case is troubling
because:
(1) it allows telephone
companies that track customer calls to use that information to
market to those customers, and
(2) this analysis
could support a First Amendment right to send spam.
As in other spam cases,
U.S. West involves a "captive," as opposed to a
"voluntary," audience. (18)
To date, the cases
that have held spam to be illegal involved claims of Internet Service
Providers and Intel,(19) that spam is a form of
trespass. This analysis of spam as a trespass is not as vulnerable
to a First Amendment attack as a state or federal statute prohibiting
spam. See, e.g., CompuServe, Inc. v. Cyber Promotions,
Inc., 962 F. Supp. 1015 (S.D. Ohio 1997) (holding that a private
companys motion seeking a court to enjoin "spam trespass"
did not constitute state action subject to a First Amendment attack).(20)
B. Federal Legislation
A proposed federal statute regarding unsolicited bulk e-mail was introduced
in the House on May 5, 1999: Internet Freedom Act, 106 H.R. 1686. (21)
This Act, in proposed Section 104, entitled "Protection from Fraudulent
Unsolicited E-Mail," would amend 18 U.S.C. § 1030 such that, inter
alia, it would be a violation of the Act to "intentionally
and without authorization initiate the transmission of a bulk unsolicited
electronic mail message to a protected computer with knowledge that
such message falsifies an Internet domain,(22) header
information, date or time stamp, originating e-mail address or other
identifier" or to sell or distribute a computer program which (a)
"is designed or produced primarily for the purpose of concealing
the source or routing information of bulk unsolicited electronic mail
messages (23) in a manner prohibited by" the Act,
(b) "has only limited commercially significant purpose or use other
than to conceal such source or routing information," or (c) "is
marketed by the violator or another person acting in concert with the
violator and with the violator's knowledge for use in concealing the
source or routing information of such messages." The Act provides
for the following potential damages for various offenses: injunctive
relief and other equitable relief, actual monetary losses, statutory
damages of $15,000 per violation or an amount of up to $10 per message
per violation, whichever is greater; reasonable attorneys' fees, and
other litigation costs.
C. State Legislation
Some states have passed laws regarding unsolicited e-mail.
1.
Washington State: Wash. Rev. Code § 19.190.020 (1999), entitled
"Unsolicited or Misleading Electronic Mail -- Prohibition,"
provides as follows:
(1)
No person, corporation, partnership, or association may initiate
the transmission of a commercial electronic mail message from
a computer located in Washington or to an electronic mail address
that the sender knows, or has reason to know, is held by a Washington
resident that:
(a) Uses a third
party's Internet domain name without permission of the third party,
or otherwise misrepresents any information in identifying the
point of origin or the transmission path of a commercial electronic
mail message; or
(b) Contains false or misleading
information in the subject line.
(2) For purposes
of this section, a person, corporation, partnership, or association
knows that the intended recipient of a commercial electronic
mail message is a Washington resident if that information is
available, upon request, from the registrant of the Internet
domain name contained in the recipient's electronic mail
address.
2. Nevadas
statute focuses on spam which contains advertisements. Nev. Rev. Stat.
41.730, entitled "Liability of Persons Who Transmit Items of Electronic
Mail That Include Advertisements," provides:
1. Except as otherwise
provided in Nev. Rev. Stat. 41.735, (24) if a person
transmits or causes to be transmitted to a recipient an item of
electronic mail (25) that includes an advertisement,
the person is liable to the recipient for civil damages unless:
(a) The person has
a preexisting business or personal relationship with the recipient;
(b) The recipient
has expressly consented to receive the item of electronic mail
from the person; or
(c) The advertisement
is readily identifiable as promotional, or contains a statement
providing that it is an advertisement, and clearly and conspicuously
provides:
(1) The legal name,
complete street address and electronic mail address of the person
transmitting the electronic mail; and
(2) A notice that
the recipient may decline to receive additional electronic mail
that includes an advertisement from the person transmitting the
electronic mail and the procedures for declining such electronic
mail.
2. If a person is liable
to a recipient pursuant to subsection 1, the recipient may recover
from the person:
(a) Actual damages
or damages of $10 per item of electronic mail received, whichever
is greater; and
(b) Attorney's fees
and costs.
3. In addition to any
other recovery that is allowed pursuant to subsection 2, the recipient
may apply to the district court of the county in which the recipient
resides for an order enjoining the person from transmitting to the
recipient any other item of electronic mail that includes an advertisement.
3. California has also
passed a law dealing with unsolicited bulk e-mail (which also applies
to unsolicited faxes). This California Statute requires that the sender
of unsolicited advertisements advise the e-mail recipient that the e-mail
is an advertisement by placing the characters "ADV:" first
in the subject line and also requires that the sender provide the recipient
a return address or a toll-free number where the recipient can request
that the sender refrain from sending additional unsolicited e-mail.
See Cal. Business & Professions Code §17538.4. (Division
7, Part 3, Chapter 1) (Deering 1999), entitled "Unsolicited fax
or e-mail."(26)
IV.
Copyright
Several recent Internet related cases and statutes involve
copyright issues, including the rights to sound recordings, distribution
and derivative rights, and copyright term.
A. Legislation
The Digital Millennium
Copyright Act of 1998 (105 P.L. 304; 112 Stat. 2860)
1. Exempts Internet service providers
from liability for copyright infringement under certain circumstances;
2. Makes it illegal to circumvent technology
used to prevent copyright infringement(27) and, inter alia (this
provision is to take effect two (2) years from October 28, 1998);
3. Expands the rights of owners of
sound recordings to restrict performance (or in some cases receive
set royalties for) of their sound recordings from what was covered
by the Digital Sound Recording Act of 1995 (28) to any sound recordings
provided over the Internet whether or not it is via subscription
or interactive (this provision is effective as of the date of enactment).
B. RIAA v. Diamond
Multimedia Sys., Inc., 29 F. Supp. 2d 624 (C.D. Cal. 1998) affd,
180 F.3d 1072 (9th Cir. 1999), 51 U.S.P.Q.2d (BNA) 1115. The Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed the denial
of a preliminary injunction finding that Diamond Multimedia, the maker
of Rio,(29) had not violated the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 (30)
with the Rio because the Rio could not make copies except from a hard
drive. The Court found that such copying was not covered by the Act.
However, on August 4, 1999, Diamond Multimedia and the RIAA announced
that they entered into a settlement agreement. RIAAs general counsel
and senior executive vice president, Cary Sherman, stated that this
"announcement makes clear that the future of the digital music
marketplace will be created in the marketplace itself, enabled by initiatives
like SDMI [Secure Digital Music Initiative]."(31) While the authors
have not been able to obtain details of the settlement reached between
RIAA and Diamond Multimedia, one can infer from what has been published
that the terms probably include a requirement that Diamond incorporate
technology which prevents serial copying.
C. Tasini v. New York
Times Co., 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 23360 (2d Cir. 1999). A federal
district court in New York held that making
publication information accessible on Lexis-Nexis and other similar
data bases "constitutes reproduction and distribution of freelance
contributions as part of that particular collective work." Tasini
v. The New York Times Co., 972 F.Supp. 804 (S.D.N.Y. 1997), 43 U.S.P.Q.2D
(BNA) 1801. The District Court held that the publishers were protected
by a privilege afforded to publishers of "collective works"
under Section 201(c) of the Copyright Act, but the Second Circuit reversed
this decision in Tasini v. New York Times Co., 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS
23360 (2d Cir. 1999). The Second Circuit concluded that "the Publishers'
licensing of Authors' works to UMI for inclusion in these databases
is not within the Section 201(c) revision privilege." Id. at *22.
The Court continued:
The relevant inquiry under Section
201(c), is . . . whether the republication or redistribution of
the copyrighted piece is as part of a collective work that constitutes
a "revision" of the previous collective work, or even
a "later collective work in the same series." If the republication
is a "new anthology" or a different collective work, it
is not within the privilege. H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 122-23 (1976),
reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.A.A.N. 5659, 5738. Because NYTO is for present
purposes at best a new anthology of innumerable editions of the
Times, and at worst a new anthology of innumerable articles from
these editions, it cannot be said to be a "revision" of
any (or all) particular editions or to be a "later collective
work in the same series."
Id. at *22-23. Accord Ryan v. Carl Corp.,
23 F. Supp. 2d 1146, 1150 (N.D. Cal. 1998), 48 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1626
(commenting that "calling the reproduction of a single article
a "revision" of a collected work, however, is more strained
than even a flexible interpretation can withstand" and construing
Section 201(c) of the Copyright Act in the authors favor).
D. Challenging the constitutionality
of Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 (CTEA).(32) The
Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 has been criticized
as copyright overprotection, rather than copyright extension. This Act
is important to the Internet because it reduces the benefits of those
Internet sites that provide digital copies of public domain works.
Some have criticized the CTEA because it
offers an extension of the term of copyrights for an author or creator
without any reciprocal requirement of the author or creator. Also, the
CTEA delays works from entering the public domain, without any corresponding
benefit to society. One such critic of the CTEA, Lawrence Lessig, the
Berkman Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, has filed a lawsuit
on behalf of Eldritch Press,(33) a non-profit organization that posts
literary works on the Internet when they have entered the public domain.(34)
Article I, Section 8 of the United States
Constitution states that Congress may "promote the Progress of
Science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to Authors and
Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries"
(emphasis added). In 1790, this limited time period of copyright was
twenty-eight years. Subsequently, Congress enacted a series of extensions,
which provide for copyright terms of up to seventy-five years. These
extensions retroactively extended the copyright for works which were
written many years ago that would otherwise soon enter the public domain.(35)
The Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 has again retroactively
extended the copyright terms; this extension is challenged in the Eldritch
lawsuit. The plaintiffs argue that (1) the retroactive extension in
the Sonny Bono Copyright Extension Act violates the constitutional "limited
times" requirement for constitutional exclusive rights to "writings
and discoveries" and (2) the retroactive and prospective extensions
violate the First Amendment because they suppress speech without promoting
any respective governmental interests. The Sonny Bono Copyright Extension
Act has also been criticized by some as merely a vehicle which Disney
(which lobbied for the Act) will benefit from, because Mickey Mouse
would have entered the public domain in 2004. Under the Sonny Bono Act,
however, Mickey will remain Disneys copyright until 2023.(36)
V.
Domain Names and Marks
Domain names give an entity an Internet
identity and enable the public to locate an entity on the Internet.
A. Case law
Registration of a competitor's
mark as a domain name (hijacking) was held to be legal in Juno Online
Servs., L.P. v. Juno Lighting, Inc., 979 F.Supp. 684 (N.D. Ill. 1997),
44 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1913.
B. Playboy Enters., Inc. v. Welles,
7 F.Supp.2d 1098 (S.D. Ca. 1998), 47 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1186, aff'd,
1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 27739 (9th Cir. 1998). A former playmate was
permitted to state her association with Playboy (PEI)(37) on her own
Web site. The heading of the defendants Web site is "Terri
Welles--Playmate of the Year 1981," and title of the link page
is "Terri Welles--Playboy Playmate of the Year 1981." Each
of the pages uses "PMOY '81" as a repeating watermark in
the background. According to defendant, eleven of the fifteen free
Web pages include a disclaimer at the bottom of the pages which indicates
that the Web site is not endorsed by Playboy. Id. at 1100. Playboy
moved for a preliminary injunction which would enjoin defendant from
(1) using the trademarked term "Playmate of the Year" in
the title of the home page and the link page; (2) from using the watermark
"PMOY '81" in the background; and (3) from using the trademarked
terms "Playboy and Playmate" in the meta-tagging
of defendant's site. The Court denied a preliminary injunction because
the trademarks that defendant uses, and the manner in which she uses
them, describe her and identify her. Therefore the Court held that
the defendant has made a "fair use" of these marks(38) and
her site was not confusingly similar to Playboys site.
C. Playboy Enters., Inc. v. Netscape
Communications Corp., 55 F. Supp. 2d 1070
(C.D. Ca. 1999). This case involves the sale of online banner ads
keyed to specific search terms: "playboy" and "playmate."
The Court ruled that the terms "playboy" and "playmate"
are generic and that Playboy has no monopoly on those words in all
forms. Consequently, the Court denied Playboys request for a
preliminary injunction against Excite, Inc. and Netscape Communications
Corporation finding that the sale of those search keywords to third-party
advertisers which operate adult entertainment sites does not constitute
trademark infringement or dilution.
D. Avery Dennison Corp. v. Sumpton,
1999
U.S. App. LEXIS 19954 (9th Cir. 1999) 51 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1801. This
was an appeal of a case in which an entity which maintained domain
registrations for individual names that included among other surnames,
"Avery.net" and "Dennison.net" was held not to
have diluted the "Avery Dennison" mark. The Ninth Circuit
reversed the District Courts holding that there was dilution.
The Ninth Circuit held that:
1. The Avery Dennison mark was not
famous because it was not "truly prominent and renowned"
so that even marks "with such powerful consumer associations
and even non-competing users can impinge on their value." Avery,
1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 19954, *13. The Court pointed out that there
were many registrations of marks and uses of the marks "Avery"
and "Dennison" by others, and this factor weighs against
those being famous marks.
2. The Court also said that although
"an intent to arbitrage" constituted a commercial use,
an intent to "capitalize on the surname status of 'Avery' and
'Dennison' did not constitute a commercial use of a mark."
Id. at *30.
E. Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection
Act
The United States Senate has passed
a proposed act, entitled the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection
Act (S. 1255), which would:
1. Allow the bringing of an in rem
action(39) against the domain name that had been registered in violation
of the Act; and
2. Permit recovery for cybersquatting,
i.e. allow trademark holders to obtain civil damages from those
who register domain name identifiers which are identical or similar
to their mark: the trademark holder can recover damages of at least
$1,000.00, but not more than $100,000.000 per domain name identifier.
F. Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey
Combined Shows v. Utah Div. of Travel Dev., 170 F.3d 449
(4th Cir. 1999), 50 U.S.P.Q.2d (BNA) 1065, held that Ringling Brothers
could not prevent Utah from using "The Greatest Snow on Earth"
as a slogan for Utah's winter sports attractions because the Federal
Anti-Dilution law was held to require a showing of "actual economic
harm" to the famous marks' economic value by lessening its former
selling power as an advertising agent for its goods or services. Proof
of this harm should be demonstrated by surveys and showing actual loss.
G. The First Circuit, in I.P. Lund Trading
A.P.S. v. Kohler Co., 163 F.3d 27, 49 U.S.P.Q.2d (BNA) 1225 (1st
Cir. 1998), specifically rejected the "lessening of demand for
the product" test that had been applied by the Fourth Circuit in
the Ringling Brothers case.
H. ICANN
ICANN is the new non-profit body responsible
for domain name system management, IP address allocation, and related
functions. ICANN was established last year to (a) phase out the government's
involvement in the domain name system and (b) to end the monopoly
held by Network Solutions Inc. (Nasdaq: NSOL), by opening up the registration
of such popular domains as ".com" and ".net" to
additional companies. In the past year:
1. An Internet tax ICANN sought to
impose was rejected. ICANN had funding problems and sought to impose
a charge on all new Internet domain names payable to ICANN. A Congressional
committee started an investigation and ICANN backed down on this.
2. Open meetings were initiated. ICANN
was originally holding closed-door meetings. Criticisms erupted
and ICANN appears to have changed its procedures and now holds open
meetings.
3. Criticism by Ralph Nadar's organization:
Ralph Nader, a consumer rights advocate,
challenges how ICANNs power is controlled and proposes "that
the group's authority should be based on a multilateral government
charter that clearly defines and limits the organization's authority."
He has previously criticized the "beleaguered organization
for catering to corporate interests and overextending its authority."(40)
a. Nader argues that the right to
have an Internet domain name should be considered on par with
the right to have a street address, a phone number, or a name.
b. Nader wants ICANNs internal
documents and budget available to the public.
c. Nader invites public comment to
his thirteen point proposal(41) at ralph@essential.org.
4. An additional controversy exists regarding
the registration of domain names. A number of entrepreneurs have also
tried to change the organization of the domain naming systems by allowing
for the private ownership of new top level domain names. Their proposal
is that private companies that create a top level domain name and
are able to obtain market acceptance of it should own the rights to
register and run the registry of those domain names. Although the
White House at one time appeared to favor this approach, ICANN has,
to date, rejected any such proposal.
5. The U.S.P.T.O. weighs in. The "Green
Paper" and the "White Paper" were drafted under Ira
Magaziners direction when he was in the White House. Mr. Magaziner
appeared to be somewhat sympathetic to the proposed market-oriented
approach for adding top level domain names. Becky Burr,(42) at the
Department of Commerce, now appears to be in charge of policies regarding
these issues and seems opposed to the marketing approach of adding
top level domain names.
The U.S.P.T.O., as of May 18, 1999,
allows the registration of second level domain names stating on
its Web site at
http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/tac/domain/tmdomain.htm:
An Internet domain name that is used
to identify and distinguish the goods and/or services of one person,
from the goods of and/or services of others, and to indicate the
source of the goods and/or services may be registered as a trademark
in the U.S.P.T.O.
On the other hand, the U.S.P.T.O. is
hostile to the registration of top level domain names stating in
its policy dated September 29, 1999 in Guide No. 2-99 available
at
http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/tac/notices/guide299.htm:
If a mark is composed solely of a
TLD for "domain name registry services" (e.g., the services
currently provided by Network Solutions, Inc. of registering .com
domain names), registration should be refused under Trademark
Act §§1, 2, 3 and 45, 15 U.S.C. §§1051, 1052, 1053 and 1127, on
the ground that it the TLD would not be perceived as a mark. The
examining attorney should include evidence from the NEXIS® database,
the Internet, or other sources to show that the proposed mark
is currently used as a TLD or is under consideration as a new
TLD.
If the TLD merely describes the subject
or user of the domain space, registration should be refused under
Trademark Act §2(e)(1), 15 U.S.C. §2(e)(1), on the ground that
the TLD is merely descriptive of the registry services.
The U.S.P.T.O. has also rejected applications
to register proposed top level domain names for services other than
just "domain name registry services." The writers are unaware
of the U.S.P.T.O. granting any registrations of proposed top level
domain names to date regardless of the services with which those proposed
domain names are associated.
VI.
Privacy
The latest developments concerning privacy on the Internet
relate to the passage of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act
of 1998 and the effect of the European Privacy Directive.
A. Legislation
The Children's
Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (COPPA), 64 Fed. Reg. 22750 (April
27, 1999), forbids the collection and distribution of minors personal
information(43) without parental consent and restricts distribution and
use of that information. This Act is intended to provide protection to
the individually identifiable data of children as collected by Internet
Service Providers or Web site operators. The Act is supposed to be implemented
by FTC rules which should be in place between eighteen and thirty months
from COPPAs enactment. The FTC has not yet issued any final rules,
but interim rules were proposed on April 20, 1999:
Of particular importance
is the COPPA requirem
ent that, with certain
exceptions, Web sites obtain "verifiable parental consent"
before collecting, using, or disclosing personal information from
children. Section 312.5 of the proposed rule sets forth this requirement
along with the following performance standard:
An operator must make reasonable efforts
to obtain verifiable parental consent, taking into consideration
available technology. Any method to obtain verifiable consent must
be reasonably calculated, in light of available technology, to ensure
that the person providing consent is the child's parent. (64 Fed.
Reg. 22756)
In its discussion of this section,
the Commission identified a number of methods an operator might
use to obtain verifiable parental consent, including a print-and-send
form signed by the parent and mailed or faxed to the Web site; a
credit-card transaction initiated by the parent; a call made by
the parent to a toll-free number; or an e-mail accompanied by the
parent's valid digital signature. The Commission also solicited
comment on whether there are other e-mail based mechanisms that
could provide sufficient assurance that the person providing consent
is the child's parent. (64 Fed. Reg. 22756, 22762) (44)
B. European Union Privacy Directive
The European Union (EU), in its European Union Privacy Directive,(45)
has granted broad rights to individuals about whom personal information
is collected and stored in databases. This EU position, based on the idea
that privacy is a fundamental human right, is more rigorous than the United
States position, which does not provide as extensive access to individuals
to review this kind of information and has relatively few restrictions
on the use of such personal information.(46) This conflict between the
EU position and the US position has threatened international electronic
commerce.(47) Therefore, the US Department of Commerce negotiated with
EU representatives and proposed safe harbor principles for American companies
to use in determining whether they comply with EU data protection laws.(48)
The "safe harbor" arrangement is expected to be finalized in
the fall of 1999. (49)
Major companies are now requiring sites in which they
advertise to meet these standards and the proposed safe harbor provision.
For example, IBMs policy(50) on personal information states that
it will inform the consumer how it will use the personal information collected:
At IBM, we intend to
give you as much control as possible over your personal information.
In general, you can visit IBM on the Web without telling us who
you are or revealing any information about yourself. There are times,
however, when we may need information from you, such as your name
and address. It is our intent to let you know before we collect
personal information from you on the Internet.
If you choose to give us personal information
via the Internet that we or our business partners may need -- to
correspond with you, process an order or provide you with a subscription,
for example it is our intent to let you know how we will
use such information. If you tell us that you do not wish to have
this information used as a basis for further contact with you, we
will respect your wishes. We do keep track of the domains from which
people visit us. We analyze this data for trends and statistics,
and then we discard it.
VII.
First Amendment: Child Online Protection Act
The Child Online Protection Act was
held unconstitutional in ACLU v. Reno, 1998 U.S. District Lexis 18546
(E.D. Pa. 1998) and ACLU v. Reno, 31 F.Supp. 2d 473 (E.D. Pa. 1999), but
there have not been any decisions from the appellate level yet.
VIII. Jurisdictional Issues
A. There have also been
some interesting recent cases relating to jurisdiction. First, according
to the Internet Newsletter, August 1999, a New York trial court has held
that a gambling site in Antigua that would not allow gambling on the site
if anyone gave an address in a state that prohibited gambling but did
not take any other further steps to verify the address accuracy
constituted a violation of New York State's prohibitions on gambling and
the Federal Wire Act, the Travel Act, and the Interstate Transportation
of Wagering Paraphernalia Act. People v. World Interactive Gaming Corp.,
N.Y. Sup. Ct., N.Y. Co. (July 24, 1999).
B. Coastal Video Communications
Corp. v. Staywell Corp., 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11827 (E.D. Va. 1999).
In a copyright case where one company alleged that its employee handbook
had been infringed by another company, the District Court held that whether
there was long-arm statute jurisdiction depended on whether the defendant
had actually sold its publication, not just attempted to sell its publication,
in Virginia. The Court also said that even if such copies were sold in
Virginia, that would not be enough to grant specific jurisdiction in that
case because the declaratory judgment action that had been filed does
not "arise from the sale of the defendant's publication" but
rather from its very existence. Perhaps the lesson from this case, if
you desire to get jurisdiction, is to file an infringement action in a
copyright case instead of a declaratory judgment.
C. Where a Virginia resident
sued out of state defendants for posting allegedly defamatory material
(one defendant posted the material on servers in Virginia via "AOL"
and the other defendant posted the material on servers outside Virginia
but was held by the Court to be doing business in Virginia from its Web
site), a District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia held that
there was a tort in the State of Virginia, and there were sufficient minimum
contacts to allow for jurisdiction. Bochan v. LaFontaine, 1999 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 8253 (E.D. Va. 1999).
D. In a similar case, Melvin
v. Doe, Cir. Ct. of Loudoun County, Civil No. 21942 (June 24, 1999), a
Virginia Court held that where both the plaintiff and the defendant were
Pennsylvania residents, even though a tort may have occurred in Virginia
by defamatory material being placed on the AOL server in Virginia, there
were not sufficient minimum contacts to meet the jurisdiction requirements
for personal jurisdiction.
E. In Mink v. AAAA
Dev., 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 22783 (5th Cir. 1999), the Fifth Circuit articulated
a structure for determining when a court can assume jurisdiction of a
company with a presence in cyberspace.
1. The Fifth Circuit
followed the sliding scale in Zippos Mfg. Co. v. Zippo Dot Com,
952 F. Supp. 1119, 1124 (W.D. Pa. 1997), setting out three levels
of Internet business. (51)
a. First, companies which merely
advertise or post information about their business on the Internet
with "passive" Web sites cannot be sued out of state
simply because they maintain the Web site. In Mink, the companys
Web site "provides users with a printable mail-in order form,
AAAAs toll-free telephone number, a mailing address, and
an electronic mail ("e-mail") address, [and] orders
are not taken through AAAAs website [sic]. This does not
classify the website [sic] as anything more than a passive advertisement."
Mink at *7.
b. The second category consists of
companies whose Web site allows a user to exchange information
with a host computer. Citing Zippos, the Court reasoned that "the
exercise of jurisdiction is determined by the level of interactivity."
Mink at *7 - *8.
c. The companies which enter into
contracts with out-of-state residents that involve the "knowing
and repeated transmission of computer files over the Internet,"
can be sued in the home state of the out of state residents. Mink
at *8 -*9.
IX.
Conclusion
We are now at the point where there are judicial precedents
and/or proposed statutes resolving many previously troubling Internet
issues. Future cases are likely to focus more on reconciling the conflicts
between intellectual property rights and/or privacy rights, on one hand,
and free speech rights, on the other hand.
END NOTES
(1) In Vault Corp. v. Quaid Software Ltd., 847 F.2d 255 (5th Cir. 1988),
the Fifth Circuit, applying Louisiana law, held that the shrinkwrap license
was unenforceable. In this case, the Plaintiff, Vault Corporation, developed
software for Vault Corp.'s software developer customers to embed in their
software to prevent their end user customers from using the software on
more than one computer. When the Vault Corporation sold its software,
it included a shrinkwrap license which was expressly authorized by a Louisiana
statute and prohibited reverse engineering of the software. The defendant,
Quaid, purchased the software and reversed engineered it. The Fifth Circuit
held that the shrinkwrap license and the related statute were unenforceable
because they were "pre-empted" by copyright law. The Court's
holding implies that if pre-emption does not apply, then the shrinkwrap
license is enforceable. Most courts that have decided the issue have held
that agreements prohibiting reverse engineering and disclosure of confidential
information are not pre-empted by the Copyright Act because they involve
an agreement between private consenting parties, and therefore are different
from copyright which is imposed by statute. See, e.g., Computer Associates
v. Altai, 982 F.2d 693 (2nd Cir. 1992).
(2) See, e.g., Feist Publications, Inc.
v. Rural Telephone Company Service, 499 U.S. 340, 111 S. Ct. 1282, 113
L.Ed. 2d 358 (1991). For additional materials on copyright law, see the
writers law firm Web site at http://www.internetlegal.com. There
is some concern among commentators that to allow unlimited use of shrinkwrap
and clickwrap licenses to protect material not otherwise protected by
copyright law could vitiate the copyright fair use doctrine.
(3) This case also dealt with the enforceability
of a limitations of remedies clause contained in a shrinkwrap license.
(4) See O.C.G.A. §10-12-2.
(5) A "secure electronic signature"
is defined as "an electronic or digital method executed or adopted
by a party with the intent to be bound by or to authenticate a record,
which is unique to the person using it, is capable of verification, is
under the sole control of the person using it, and is linked to data in
such a manner that if the data are changed the electronic signature is
invalidated." O.C.G.A. §10-12-3.
(6) The Act provides, in Section 106, Legal
Recognition of Electronic Records, Electronic Signatures, and Electronic
Contracts
(a) A record or signature may not be denied
legal effect or enforceability solely because it is in electronic form.
(b) A contract may not be denied legal
effect or enforceability solely because an electronic record was used
in its formation.
(c) If a law requires a record to be in
writing, or provides consequences if it is not, an electronic record
satisfies the law.
(d) If a law requires a signature, or provides
consequences in the absence of a signature, the law is satisfied with
respect to an electronic record if the electronic record includes an
electronic signature.
See UETA Sections 201, 301, and 401(a) (1998
Annual Meeting Draft); Uncitral Model Articles 5, 6, and 7.
(7) A copy of the proposed Act is available
online at www.law.upenn.edu/library/ulc/ulc.htm
(8) The National Conference of Commissioners
on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) and the American Law Institute (ALI) are
responsible for overseeing updates to the Uniform Commercial Code. In
1995, a committee was formed to draft a separate UCC article to specifically
address software licensing and electronic commerce. Various versions have
been proposed and debated. The goal is to propose a version that most,
if not all, of the state legislatures will adopt.
(9) UCITA was approved by the National Conference
of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) at its annual meeting
in Denver at the end of July, 1999. Foster, Ed, UCITA Author Does Some
Moonlighting for Money, Courtesy of Microsoft, InfoWorld: The Gripe Line,
Oct. 11, 1999.
(10) Graff, George L., Controversial Computer
Act Offers Major Innovations: Proposed Uniform Statute for The Information
Age Is Approved, Computer Law Strategist, Aug. 1999, Vol. XVI, No. 4.
(11) Id.
(12) See also http://www.ll.georgetown.edu/allwash/UCITA2html
(13) Spam is the name given for unsolicited
e-mail messages which flood the Internet. Spam generally consists of commercial
advertising (sometimes for adult oriented Web sites or get-rich-quick
schemes).
(14) A copy of this Order is attached as
Appendix A.
(15) See William M. McSwain, The Long Arm
of Cyber-Reach, 112 Harv. L. Rev. ___ (Issue 7, May, 1999).
(16) See, CompuServe, Inc. v. Cyber Promotions,
Inc., 962 F.Supp. 1015 (S.D. Ohio 1997) in which the court held that enjoining
the sending of spam to CompuServe's customers was based on a trespass
action that didn't involve First Amendment considerations.
(17) See Central Hudson Gas & Elec.
Corp. v. Public Serv. Commn of N.Y., 447 U.S. 557, 562-563, 65 L.Ed.2d
341, 100 S.Ct. 2343 (1980).
(18) Cf. Sable Communications v. FCC, 492
U.S. 115, 127-128, 109 S.Ct. 2829, 2837, 106 L.Ed.2d 93 (1989) (there
is no captive audience problem where the listener of dial-a-porn must
take affirmative steps to receive the communication).
(19) See Intel v. Hamidi, supra.
(20) In similar cases, the First Amendment
issue was not raised. See, e.g., America Online v. IMS, 24 F. Supp. 2d
548 (E.D. Va. 1998); America Online v. Prime Data Sys., Inc., 1998 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 20226 (E.D. Va. 1998); America Online v. LCGM, Inc., 46 F.
Supp. 2d 444 (E.D. Va 1998).
(21) The text is attached as Appendix B.
(22) Because this language is written broadly
enough to prevent noncommercial anonymous bulk e-mailings, it arguably
violates the First Amendment. See, ACLU of Georgia v. Miller, 977 F.Supp.
1228 (N.D. Ga. 1997).
(23) The Act defines the term "unsolicited
electronic mail message" as "any substantially identical electronic
mail message other than electronic mail initiated by any person to others
with whom such person has a prior relationship, including prior business
relationship, or electronic mail sent by a source to recipients where
such recipients, or their designees, have at any time affirmatively requested
to receive communications from that source."
(24) Nev. Rev. Stat. 41.735 provides immunity
for persons who provide users with access to a network and applies to
items of electronic mail obtained voluntarily.
(25) Nev. Rev. Stat. 41.715 defines "electronic
mail" as a message, a file or other information that is transmitted
through a local, regional or global network, regardless of whether the
message, file or other information is:
1. Viewed;
2. Stored for retrieval at a later time;
3. Printed onto paper or other similar
material; or
4. Filtered or screened by a computer program
that is designed or intended to filter or screen items of electronic
mail.
(26) Cal. Business & Professions Code
§17538.4 provides as follows:
(a) No person or entity conducting
business in this state shall facsimile (fax) or cause to be faxed, or
electronically mail (e-mail) or cause to be e-mailed, documents consisting
of unsolicited advertising material for the lease, sale, rental, gift
offer, or other disposition of any realty, goods, services, or extension
of credit unless:
(1) In the case of a fax, that person
or entity establishes a toll-free telephone number that a recipient
of the unsolicited faxed documents may call to notify the sender
not to fax the recipient any further unsolicited documents.
(2) In the case of e-mail, that person
or entity establishes a toll-free telephone number or valid sender
operated return e-mail address that the recipient of the unsolicited
documents may call or e-mail to notify the sender not to e-mail
any further unsolicited documents.
(b) All unsolicited faxed or e-mailed
documents subject to this section shall include a statement informing
the recipient of the toll-free telephone number that the recipient may
call, or a valid return address to which the recipient may write or
e-mail, as the case may be, notifying the sender not to fax or e-mail
the recipient any further unsolicited documents to the fax number, or
numbers, or e-mail address, or addresses, specified by the recipient.
In the case of faxed material, the statement
shall be in at least nine-point type. In the case of e-mail, the statement
shall be the first text in the body of the message and shall be of the
same size as the majority of the text of the message.
(c) Upon notification by a recipient of
his or her request not to receive any further unsolicited faxed or e-mailed
documents, no person or entity conducting business in this state shall
fax or cause to be faxed or e-mail or cause to be e-mailed any unsolicited
documents to that recipient.
(d) In the case of e-mail, this section
shall apply when the unsolicited e-mailed documents are delivered to
a California resident via an electronic mail service provider's service
or equipment located in this state. For these purposes "electronic
mail service provider" means any business or organization qualified
to do business in this state that provides individuals, corporations,
or other entities the ability to send or receive electronic mail through
equipment located in this state and that is an intermediary in sending
or receiving electronic mail.
(e) As used in this section, "unsolicited
e-mailed documents" means any e-mailed document or documents consisting
of advertising material for the lease, sale, rental, gift offer, or
other disposition of any realty, goods, services, or extension of credit
that meet both of the following requirements:
(1) The documents are addressed to
a recipient with whom the initiator does not have an existing business
or personal relationship.
(2) The documents are not sent at the
request of, or with the express consent of, the recipient.
(f) As used in this section, "fax"
or "cause to be faxed" or " e-mail" or "cause
to be e-mailed" does not include or refer to the transmission of
any documents by a telecommunications utility or Internet service provider
to the extent that the telecommunications utility or Internet service
provider merely carries that transmission over its network.
(g) In the case of e-mail that consists
of unsolicited advertising material for the lease, sale, rental, gift
offer, or other disposition of any realty, goods, services, or extension
of credit, the subject line of each and every message shall include
"ADV:" as the first four characters. If these messages contain
information that consists of unsolicited advertising material for the
lease, sale, rental, gift offer, or other disposition of any realty,
goods, services, or extension of credit, that may only be viewed, purchased,
rented, leased, or held in possession by an individual 18 years of age
and older, the subject line of each and every message shall include
"ADV:ADLT" as the first eight characters.
(h) An employer who is the registered owner
of more than one e-mail address may notify the person or entity conducting
business in this state e-mailing or causing to be e-mailed, documents
consisting of unsolicited advertising material for the lease, sale,
rental, gift offer, or other disposition of any realty, goods, services,
or extension of credit of the desire to cease e-mailing on behalf of
all of the employees who may use employer-provided and employer-controlled
e-mail addresses.
(i) This section, or any part of this section,
shall become inoperative on and after the date that federal law is enacted
that prohibits or otherwise regulates the transmission of unsolicited
advertising by electronic mail (e-mail).
(27) See Digital Millenium Copyright Act,
Sec. 1201. Circumvention of copyright protection systems.
(28) Digital Performance Right in Sound
Recordings Act of 1995 (Public Law 104-39).
(29) The Rio portable music player is a
digital audio recording device. The Rio is a small device (roughly the
size of an audio cassette) with headphones that allows a user to download
MP3 audio files from a computer and to listen to them elsewhere.
(30) See 17 U.S.C. §1001 et seq. (P.L. 102-563,
at 4, 106 Stat. 4248).
(31) Discord Surrounding Diamond Multimedias
Rio Player is Ended Through Settlement Agreement, The Intellectual Property
Strategist, Sept. 1999, Volume 1, Number 12, at 4.
(32) See P.L. 105-298, 112 Stat. 2827.
(33) Eric Eldred founded Eldritch Press
in late 1995, and initially, Eldritch Press posted works of American literature
by authors such as Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry James. Now, Eldritch
Press posts new works the moment they enter the public domain. Some of
the works Eldritch Press posts are out of print or are not included in
library collections, and therefore they are not obtainable by the public
in any other way. See How Long is Too Long? Recent Congressional Copyright
Giveaway Claimed Unconstitutional at http://eldred.ne.mediaone.net/pr-1999-01-12.txt.
(34) See Eldred v. Reno, United States District
Court for the District of Columbia, Case No. 1:99CV00065 JLG (filed January
11, 1999). Visit this Web site to view the pleadings in this case: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/eldredvreno/legaldocs.html.
(35) See http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/ccer/ccer.htm,
a site that documents all renewals of 1923 book copyrights, representing
works that the Copyright Term Extension Act keeps from the public domain.
(36) Slotek, Jim, M-I-C . . . © you real
soon . . . k-e-y . . ., Toronto Sun Times, Nov. 1, 1998; see also Naughton,
John, Mickey Mouse Saved for Disney? Phew. What a Narrow Squeak, Guardian
Unlimited, May 2, 1999.
(37) As found by the Court, Playboy Enterprises
(PEI):
owns federally registered trademarks
for the terms Playboy, Playmate, Playmate of the Month, and Playmate
of the Year. The term Playmate of the Year is sometimes abbreviated
"PMOY." PEI does not have a federally registered trademark
in the abbreviation "PMOY," although PEI argues that "PMOY"
is worthy of trademark protection because it is a well-known abbreviation
for the trademark Playmate of the Year.
Playboy Enterprises, 7 F.Supp.2d 1098, 1100.
(38) The Court also found that, with respect
to the meta tags, there is no trademark infringement where defendant has
used Playboys trademarks in good faith to index the content of her
Web site.
(39) This statute would allow a court to
order the cancellation or forfeiture of the domain name or the transfer
of the name to the owner of the trademark. It will make it possible for
plaintiffs to go after domain names as a group rather than being forced
to sue each of the registrants individually. See Porsche Cars North America,
Inc. v. porsch.com, 51 F. Supp. 2d 707 (E.D. Va. 1999), 51 U.S.P.Q.2d
(BNA)1461, in which the Court rejected Porsche's "in rem" claim
to grab control of domain names incorporating versions of the "Porsche"
name to avoid having to individually sue hundreds of registrants that
had registered those domain names.
(40) Mack, Jennifer, Nader Proposes Limits
to ICANN, ZDNet News, Sept. 27, 1999.
(41) A framework for ICANN and DNS Management
Initial Proposals (comments welcome)
version 1.02 September 25, 1999
1. ICANN's authority should be based upon
a multilateral government charter. That Charter should define and limit
ICANN's authority.
2. The charter should be based upon a limited
purpose sui generis agreement among countries that express interest
in working together, and that agree that ICANN's role should be limited
to tasks essential to maintaining an efficient and reliable DNS management,
and that ICANN will not be used as an instrument to promote policies
relating to conduct or content on the Internet. (Additional multilateral
institutions may be desired to address electronic commerce issues, but
ICANN itself should not become the foundation for a vast Internet governance
institution. See http://www.cptech.org/ecom/cpt-wcpo.html)
3. ICANN should not use its power over
domain registration policy to exclude persons from the use of a domain
on issues that are not germane to managing the DNS system of mapping
IP addresses into domain names. The right to have a domain on the Internet
should be considered the same as the right to have a street address,
a telephone number or a person's name.
4. ICANN should identify a membership and
elect its board of directors from its membership before it makes additional
policy decisions (in those areas appropriate for action by ICANN).
5. Membership should be open to anyone
who uses the Internet. There should be no fee associated with membership
or voting rights.
6. The records of ICANN should be open
to the public. The public should have rights to documents as, similar
to rights provided in the US Freedom of Information Act.
7. The meetings of ICANN should be open
to the public.
8. The public should be given an annual
opportunity to review and comment on the ICANN budget.
9. The budget of ICANN should be subject
to review by the countries that provide the ICANN charter. Fees associated
with domain registration should only be spent on activities essential
to the management of the DNS system.
10. National governments should be permitted
to exercise discretion over policies relating to the use of country
top level domains (.fr, .uk, .us, etc.).
11. For generic top level domains (.com,
.org, .net, and new gTLDs), the domain space should be declared a public
resource. The registrar or registries perform services on behalf of
the users of the domains, and will not own the domain space. It should
be possible to replace firms engaged in registration services and DNS
management, without risking the stability of the Internet.
12. On matters of public interest (in the
narrow areas where ICANN will operate), such as policies regarding the
use of trademarks or the privacy of domain registration information,
ICANN should make recommendations to the sui generis multinational body
created to manage ICANN, and the multinational body should accept, reject
or modify the recommendations, after giving the public a fully adequate
opportunity to review and comment on the proposals.
13. On the issue of trademarks, the Charter
should explicitly protect the public's rights to parody, criticism and
free speech. For example, domain names like GM-sucks.com, which would
not be confused with GM.com, should be permitted.
(42) Becky Burr is the Associate Administrator
of the National Telecommunication and Information Administration, Office
of International Affairs.
(43) The Act defines "personal information"
to include an individuals first and last name, home and other physical
address, e-mail address, social security number, and telephone number.
1999 S. 809; 106 S. 809.
(44) See Benjamin I. Berman, Acting Secretary
of the Federal Trade Commission, Federal Register Notice announcing Public
Workshop on Proposed Regulations Implementing the Children's Online Privacy
Protection Act, Supplementary Information, June 23, 1999, 16 C.F.R. Part
312, Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule at http://www.ftc.gov/os/1999/9906/kidsprivacy.htm.
(45) For the official text of the European
Union Privacy Directive, see Official Journal of the European Communities
of 23 November 1995 No L. 281 p. 31. For an unofficial version, visit
http://www.cdt.org/privacy/eudirective/EU_Directive_.html.
(46) See, e.g., Mosceyunas, Anne K., On-Line
Privacy: The Push and Pull of Self-Regulation and Law, Computer Law Section
Newsletter, State Bar of Georgia, July, August, September, 1999, pp. 13-15;
Cranman, Kevin A., Internet and Electronic Communication Privacy Issues:
An Overview and Legislative Update, 14th Annual Computer Law Institute,
Program Materials 1999, Part 10.
(47) Winn, Jane K., Digital Signatures,
Smart Cards, and Electronic Payment Systems, ICLE Fourteenth Annual Computer
Law Institute, Sept. 24, 1999, p. 22.
(48) See Joint Report on Data Protection
Dialogue to the EU/US Summit, June 21, 1999, which is attached as
Appendix C.
(49) Id.
(50) See http://www.ibm.com/privacy/.
(51) For further analysis, see Koppel, Nathan,
Cyber-Ad Jurisdiction Isn't Automatic, Texas Lawyer, Sept. 27, 1999.
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