Yearly Archives: 2009

Sending @injunctions via Twitter?

Reuters reports that the High Court of Britain has ordered an injunction to be sent via Twitter:

Britain’s High Court ordered its first injunction via Twitter on Thursday, saying the social website and micro-blogging service was the best way to reach an anonymous Tweeter who had been impersonating someone.

The order will appear for the recipient the next time he or she logs into their Twitter account.  According to Andrew Walker at Griffin Law, “Whoever they are, they will be told to stop posting, to remove previous posts and to identify themselves to the High Court via a web link form.”

UPDATE 10/4: Last night I read a great article on the dispute in Time Magazine about the dispute, which involves “Conservative blogger Donal Blaney and a Twitter imposter tweeting as @blaneysblarney,” who has allegedly been impersonating as Blaney.  The article says:

in response to a petition filed by Blaney, the English High Court sent this “direct message” to @blaneysblarney via Twitter: “You are hereby ordered by the High Court of Justice to read and comply with the following order.” This was accompanied by a link to a web page containing the command to desist from the misleading tweeting. By clicking the link, the miscreant risks revealing his or her personal IP address, but Blaney realizes his shadowy opponent might not fall into this cunning trap.

Hat tip to Jim Bolin at Charlotte Law.

Did statutory damages destroy the music industry?

Have statutory damages become a narcotic that helped to destroy the music industry?  As reported elsewhere, file-sharer Joel Tenenbaum was found liable for $675,000 by a jury for copyright infringement of 30 songs.  The basis for the damages is the statutory damages provision of the Copyright Act, which permits copyright owners to seek between $750 to $30,000 per work, and if the infringement is willful, up to $150,000 per work.  Considering that the songs Tenenbaum infringed would have cost about a buck apiece on iTunes, the damages awarded — $22,500 per song and $675,000 total — are absurd.  As argued by others such as Pamela Samuelson and Tara Wheatland, grossly excessive statutory damages may be unconstitutional. 

I think the proper role for statutory damages is to provide a basis for damages when actual damages or defendant’s profits are hard to compute or are nominal.  Here, actual damages may be nominal, since the cost of each song is more or less a dollar.  Statutory damages need to have enough of a bite that the plaintiff will have a legitimate remedy.  But they shouldn’t be so excessive that they give a plaintiff a windfall.  In the Tenenbaum case, $22,500 per song is such a windfall.  Sure, the jury might have awarded $150,000 per song for a total of $4.5 million.  But the fact that the jury didn’t go to the max doesn’t make $22,500 per song any less punitive.  If a bully breaks your nose, it’s no defense for him to say that he could have broken your arms, too, but chose not to.

That’s not to say that Tenenbaum should only be liable for $1 per song.  There are other purposes to statutory damages.  Reasonable deterrence — both specific and general — can also be appropriate.  But $22,500 per song is not necessary for such deterrence.  Even at a minimum level of $750 per song, the total damages would still be $22,500 total.  Tenenbaum may also be liable for plaintiff’s attorney’s fees, which would be many, many thousands more.  $22,500 plus attorneys fees is nothing to sneeze at, and for many, would amount to personal bankruptcy.  All this for 30 songs.

This brings me to my suggestion that statutory damages may have helped to kill the music industry.  The power of possible statutory damages is undeniable.  Someone who downloads 10 songs is liable, at least in theory, for $1.5 million plus attorney’s fees.  Whoa!  Such theoretical liability is chilling, and the music industry has relied on it to try to deter file sharers.  But I have to wonder if statutory damages also made the music industry complacent.  Instead of spending critical years of trying to adapt its business model to the internet, the industry spent years suing its own customers.  In the meantime, newcomers such as the iTunes store, swooped in to create new business models to take advantage.

The patient dragonfly

As readers of my site know, I love photography.  Weston, where I live, was part of the Everglades not too many years ago, and a 10-minute bike ride will get me to one of the last great frontiers of American wildlife.  Sometimes that wildlife can be found in your very own back yard.  A few days ago, I was sitting out back looking at my daughter’s garden.  All of a sudden, a beautiful dragonfly sat right in front of me on a branch of my daughter’s tomato plant.   It sat very calmly while staring at me and studying my face.  Although my slightest facial twitch would elicit a reaction from the dragonfly, it remained still.  Wanting the picture, I ran back into the house to get my camera.  Amazingly, the dragonfly was still there and sat patiently to have his portrait taken.  I never realized until then what beautiful and colorful creatures they are.

Beautiful dragonfly

Finding me online

For new STU students, welcome to law school!  I can be found online through a variety of mechanisms.

Course pages are run through Lexis Blackboard, http://www.lexisnexis.com/lawschool.   You’ll need a Lexis ID to enroll, which will be provided to you at school.  In the meantime, the syllabus and first assignment for Civil Procedure I can be found here

This site, digital garbage, is my blog on law and technology, popular culture, photography, and whatever.  I also maintain a home page is at http://nathenson.org.  I post frequently to Twitter and Flickr, and much less frequently, to YouTube.