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No. C 99-5183 MHP
No. C 00-0074 MHP
A & M RECORDS, INC., a corporation;
GEFFEN RECORDS, INC., a
corporation;
INTERSCOPE RECORDS, a general
partnership; SONY MUSIC
ENTERTAINMENT, INC., a
corporation;
MCA RECORDS, INC., a corporation;
ATLANTIC RECORDING
CORPORATION, a corporation;
ISLAND
RECORDS, INC., a corporation;
MOTOWN RECORDS COMPANY L.P.,
a limited partnership; CAPITOL
RECORDS, a corporation; LA FACE
RECORDS, a joint venture; BMG
MUSIC d/b/a THE RCA RECORDS
LABEL, a general partnership;
UNIVERSAL RECORDS INC., a
corporation; ELEKTRA
ENTERTAINMENT
GROUP INC., a corporation; ARISTA
RECORDS, INC., a corporation; SIRE
RECORDS GROUP, INC., a
corporation; POLYGRAM RECORDS,
INC., a corporation; VIRGIN RECORDS
AMERICA, INC., a
corporation; and WARNER BROS.
RECORDS INC., a corporation,
Plaintiff(s),
v.
NAPSTER, INC., a corporation, and
DOES 1-100,
Defendant(s).
JERRY LEIBER, individually and d/b/a
JERRY LEIBER MUSIC; MIKE STOLLER, individually
and d/b/a MIKE STOLLER MUSIC; and
FRANK MUSIC CORP.,
on behalf of themselves and all others
similarly situated,
Plaintiff(s),
v.
NAPSTER, INC.,
Defendant(s).
OPINION
The matter before the court concerns the
boundary between sharing and theft,
personal use and the unauthorized worldwide
distribution of copyrighted music and sound
recordings.1 On December 6, 1999, A&M
Records and seventeen other record
companies ("record company plaintiffs") filed
a complaint for contributory and vicarious
copyright infringement, violations of the
California Civil Code section 980(a)(2), and
unfair competition against Napster, Inc.,2 an
Internet start-up that enables users to
download MP3 music files without payment.
On January 7, 2000, plaintiffs Jerry Leiber,
Mike Stoller, and Frank Music Corporation
filed a complaint for vicarious and
contributory copyright infringement on
behalf of a putative class of similarly-situated
music publishers ("music publisher
plaintiffs") against Napster, Inc. and former
CEO Eileen Richardson. The music publisher
plaintiffs filed a first amended complaint on
April 6, 2000, and on May 24, 2000, the
court entered a stipulation of dismissal of all
claims against Richardson.3 Now before this
court is the record company and music
publisher plaintiffs'' joint motion to
preliminarily enjoin Napster, Inc. from
engaging in or assisting others in copying,
downloading, uploading, transmitting, or
distributing copyrighted music without the
express permission of the rights owner.
In opposition to this motion, defendant seeks
to expand the "fair use" doctrine articulated
in Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City
Studios, Inc., 464 U.S. 417 (1984), to
encompass the massive downloading of MP3
files by Napster users. Alternatively,
defendant contends that, even if this third-party activity constitutes direct copyright
infringement, plaintiffs have not shown
probable success on the merits of their
contributory and vicarious infringement
claims. Defendant also asks the court to find
that copyright holders are not injured by a
service created and promoted to facilitate the
free downloading of music files, the vast
majority of which are copyrighted.
Having considered the parties'' arguments,
the court grants plaintiffs'' motion for a
preliminary injunction against Napster, Inc.
The court makes the following Findings of
Fact and Conclusions of Law to support the
preliminary injunction under Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure 65(d).
I. FINDINGS OF FACT
A. MP3 Technology
1. Digital compression technology makes it
possible to store audio recordings in a digital
format that uses less memory and may be
uploaded and downloaded over the Internet.
See David M. Lisi Dec. (Tygar Rep.) at 11.
MP3 is a popular, standard format used to
store such compressed audio files. See
Edward Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 3;4 Lisi Dec. (Tygar
Rep.) at 11. Compressing data into MP3
format results in some loss of sound quality.
See List Dec. (Tygar Rep.) at 12. However,
because MP3 files are smaller, they require
less time to transfer and are therefore better
suited to transmission over the Internet. See
id. at 11.
2. Consumers typically acquire MP3 files in
two ways. First, users may download audio
recordings that have already been converted
into MP3 format by using an Internet service
such as Napster. See Lisi Dec. (Tygar Rep.)
at 11. Second, "ripping" software makes it
possible to copy an audio compact disc
("CD") directly onto a computer hard-drive;
ripping software compresses the millions of
bytes of information on a typical CD into a
smaller MP3 file that requires a fraction of
the storage space. See id.; Kessler Dec. ¶¶
32; 1 Laurence F. Pulgram Dec., Exh. A
(Conroy Dep.) at 13:19-24.
B. Defendant''s Business
1. Napster, Inc. is a start-up company based
in San Mateo, California. It distributes its
proprietary file-sharing software free of
charge via its Internet website. People who
have downloaded this software can log-on to
the Napster system and share MP3 music
files with other users who are also logged-on
to the system. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 6. It is
uncontradicted that Napster users currently
upload or download MP3 files without
payment to each other, defendant, or
copyright owners. According to a Napster,
Inc. executive summary, the Napster service
gives its users the unprecedented ability to
"locate music by their favorite artists in MP3
format." 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. A
(Richardson Dep.), Exh. 127 at ER000131.5
Defendant boasts that it "takes the
frustration out of locating servers with MP3
files" by providing a peer-to-peer file-sharing
system that allows Napster account holders
to conduct relatively sophisticated searches
for music files on the hard drives of millions
of other anonymous users. See A&M
Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc., 2000 WL
573136, at *1 (N.D. Cal. May 12, 2000)
(citing Def.''s Mot. for Summ. Adjud.) at 4.
2. Although Napster was the brainchild of a
college student who wanted to facilitate
music-swapping by his roommate, see 1
Frackman Dec., Exh. B (Fanning Dep.) at
31:10-35:1, it is far from a simple tool of
distribution among friends and family.
According to defendant''s internal
documents, there will be 75 million Napster
users by the end of 2000. See 1 Frackman
Dec., Exh. A (Richardson Dep.) at 318:19-319:1, Exh. 166 at 002725. At one point,
defendant estimated that even without
marketing, its "viral service" was growing by
more than 200 percent per month. Id., Exh.
127 at ER00130. Approximately 10,000
music files are shared per second using Napster, and every second more than 100
users attempt to connect to the system. See
Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 29.
3. Napster, Inc. currently collects no
revenues and charges its clientele no fees; it
is a free service. See, e.g., 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. A (Richardson Dep.) at 179:15.
However, it has never been a nonprofit
organization. See id. at 116:10. It plans to
delay the maximization of revenues while it
attracts a large user base. See id., Exh. 127
at ER00130; 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. C
(Parker Dep.) at 160:1-162:14, Exh. 254 at
SF00099. The value of the system grows as
the quantity and quality of available music
increases. See id. at 112:18-113:2, Exh. 127
at ER00130; David J. Teece Rep. at 4.
Defendant''s internal documents reveal a
strategy of attaining a "critical mass" of
music in an "ever-expanding library" as new
members bring their MP3 collections online.
See 1 Frackman Dec. (Richardson Dep.), Exh. 127 at ER00130; Exh. C (Parker Dep.)
at 160:1-162:14, Exh. 254 at SF00099.
Defendant eventually plans to "monetize" its
user base. See id. at 115:24-116:13; Teece
Rep. at 4, 7-11. Potential revenue sources
include targeted email; advertising;
commissions from links to commercial
websites; and direct marketing of CDs,
Napster products, and CD burners and
rippers. See 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. C
(Parker Dep.) at 160:1-162:14, Exh. 254 at
SF00099-100; Teece Rep. at 2-3. Defendant
also may begin to charge fees for a premium
or commercial version of its software. See
Teece Rep. at 8; cf. 1 Frackman Dec., Exh.
A (Richardson Dep.) at 179:6-25. The
existence of a large user base that increases
daily and can be "monetized" makes Napster,
Inc. a potentially attractive acquisition for
larger, more established firms. See Teece
Rep. at 7.
4. Napster Inc.''s value----which is
measured, at least in part, by the size of its
user base----lies between 60 and 80 million
dollars. See Teece Rep. at 11-12; Def.''s Opp. at 35. Defendant obtained substantial
capital infusions after the onset of this
litigation. For example, in May 2000, the
venture firm Hummer Winblad purchased a
twenty-percent ownership interest in the
company for 13 million dollars; other
investors simultaneously invested 1.5 million
dollars. See Hank Barry Dec. ¶¶ 7.
5. The evidence shows that virtually all
Napster users download or upload
copyrighted files and that the vast majority of
the music available on Napster is
copyrighted. Eighty-seven percent of the
files sampled by plaintiffs'' expert, Dr.
Ingram Olkin, "belong to or are administered
by plaintiffs or other copyright holders."6
Olkin Rep. at 7. After analyzing Olkin''s
data, Charles J. Hausman, anti-piracy
counsel for the RIAA, determined that 834
out of 1,150 files in Olkin''s download
database belong to or are administered by
plaintiffs; plaintiffs alone own the copyrights
to more than seventy percent of the 1,150
files. See Charles J. Hausman Dec. ¶¶ 8.
Napster users shared these files without
authorization. See id.
6. Napster, Inc. has never obtained licenses
to distribute or download, or to facilitate
others in distributing or downloading, the
music that plaintiffs own. See Kevin Conroy
Dec. ¶¶ 4; Richard Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ 5; Mark
R. Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 21; Lawrence Kenswil
Dec. ¶¶ 15; Paul Vidich Dec. ¶¶ 8; Mike
Stoller Dec. ¶¶ 11.
7. Defendant''s internal documents indicate
that it seeks to take over, or at least threaten,
plaintiffs'' role in the promotion and
distribution of music. See, e.g., 1 Frackman
Dec., Exh. C (Parker Dep.), 160:1-162:14, Exh. 254, at SF00099 (declaring that
"[u]ltimately Napster could evolve into a
full-fledged music distribution platform,
usurping the record industry as we know it
today and allowing us to digitally promote
and distribute emerging artists at a fraction
of the cost" but noting that "we should focus
on our realistic short-term goals while
wooing the industry before we try to
undermine it").7
8. Defendant''s internal documents also
demonstrate that its executives knew
Napster users were engaging in unauthorized
downloading and uploading of copyrighted
music. See, e.g. 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. C
(Parker Dep.) at 160:1-162:14, Exh. 254 at
SF00100 (stating that Napster users "are
exchanging pirated music."); id. at SF00102 ("[W]e are not just making pirated music
available but also pushing demand"). Several
Napster executives admitted in their
depositions that they believed many of the
millions of MP3 music files available on
Napster were copyrighted. See, e.g., 1
Frackman Dec., Exh. B (Fanning Dep.) at
105:10-108:2.
9. At least on paper, the promotion of new
artists constituted an aspect of defendant''s
plan as early as October 1999. See Sean F.
Parker Dec. ¶¶ 5 & Exh. B8; Scott Krause
Dec. ¶¶ 6. New or unsigned artists now may
promote their works and distribute them in
MP3 format via the Napster service. See
Krause Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 8-15. Napster, Inc. has
sought business alliances and developed both
Internet- and software-based technologies to
support its New Artist Program. See Parker
Dec. ¶¶ 6. However, the court finds that the
New Artist Program accounts for a small
portion of Napster use and did not become
central to defendant''s business strategy until
this action made it convenient to give the
program top billing. An early version of the
Napster website advertised the ease with
which users could find their favorite popular
music without "wading through page after
page of unknown artists." 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. C (Parker Dep.) at 104:16-105:10,
Exh. 235. Defendant did not even create the
New Artist Program that runs on its Internet
website until April 2000----well after
plaintiffs filed this action.9 See Krause Dec.
¶¶ 9, Exh. A. Moreover, in Olkin''s sample
of 1,150 files (which were randomly selected
from over 550,000), only 232 files matched
any of the 19,440 names that were listed in
defendant''s new artist database as of July
2000. See Olkin Reply Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 3-5;
Hausman Reply Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 3-6. An RIAA
representative who analyzed the data also
noted that the list of so-called new artists
actually contained many popular stars
represented by major record
labels----among them teen sensation
Britney Spears and the legendary alternative
rock band Nirvana. See Hausman Reply Dec.
¶¶ 5. Once established artists were eliminated
from the results, only eleven new artists and
fourteen of their music files remained in
Olkin''s sample of 1,150 files. See id. ¶¶ 6.
10. Defendant employs the term "space-shifting" to refer to the process of converting
a CD the consumer already owns into MP3
format and using Napster to transfer the
music to a different computer----from
home to office, for example.10 See Def. Opp.
at 12. The court finds that space-shifting
accounts for a de minimis portion of Napster
use and is not a significant aspect of
defendant''s business. According to the
court''s understanding of the Napster
technology, a user who wanted to space-shift
files from her home to her office would have
to log-on to the system from her home
computer, leave that computer online,
commute to work, and log-on to Napster
from her office computer to access the
desired file. In the meantime, many users
might download it before she reached the
office. Common sense dictates that this use
does not draw users to the system.
Defendant fails to cite a single Napster, Inc.
document indicating that the company saw
space-shifting as an attraction for its user
base, and survey evidence shows that almost
half of college-student survey respondents
previously owned less than ten percent of the
songs they have downloaded. See E.
Deborah Jay Rep. at 4, 21 & Tbl. 7.
C. The Napster Technology
1. Internet users may download defendant''s
proprietary MusicShare software free of
charge from the Napster website. This free
software enables users to access the Napster
computer network. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 6.
2. The software becomes fully functional
after users register with Napster by selecting
an account name, or "user name," and a
password. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 6, 23.
Persons who register may include
biographical data, but registration does not
require a real name or address. See 2
Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep.) at
255:20-257:22. Napster does not associate
user names with the biographical information
that individuals provide at registration. See
id. Indeed, after a user logs-on, her physical
address information is no longer available to
the Napster server. See id.
3. The software features a browser interface,
search engine, and chat functions that
operate in conjunction with defendant''s
online network of servers. See id. ¶¶¶¶ 6, 13.
The software also contains a "hotlist" tool
that allows users to compile and store lists of
other account holders'' user names. See id.
¶¶ 8. In addition, the Napster software may
be used to play and categorize audio files,
which users can store in specific file
directories on their hard drives. See id. ¶¶¶¶
6-7. Those directories, which allow account
holders to share files on Napster, constitute
the "user library." Id. Some users store their
MP3 files in such directories; others do not.
See id.
4. Defendant maintains clusters of servers
that compose its network or system. See
Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 13. Account holders who
access the Napster network may
communicate, share files, and learn of
designated hotlist names only within the
cluster to which they are assigned. See id.
Users can access the network of servers free
of charge.
Once an account holder signs on to the
Napster network, the Napster
browser interacts with its proprietary
server-side software. See id. ¶¶¶¶ 7,
8; 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler
Dep.) at 54:16-56:10. If a user sets
the "allowable uploads" function of
the MusicShare software above zero,
all of the MP3 file names she stores
in her user library automatically
become available to other online
Napster users. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 7.
However, before the client software uploads
MP3 file names to defendant''s master
servers, it "validates" the files stored in the
user library directories. See 2 Frackman
Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep.) at 145:2-18.
The client software reads those files to
ensure they are indeed MP3 files, checking
to see whether they contain the proper
syntax specification and content. See id. If
the files are not properly formatted, their file
names will not be not uploaded to the
Napster servers. See id.
Once the file names are successfully
uploaded to the servers, each user library,
identified by a user name, becomes a
"location" on the servers. Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 8.
Napster locations are short-lived; they are
respectively added or purged every time a
user signs on or off of the network. See id.
Thus, a user's MP3 files are only accessible
to other users while she is online.
6. A user who is logged-on to the Napster
servers via the client software may access the
content of other users'' uploaded "locations"
in one of two ways: (a) by utilizing
defendant''s proprietary search engine, or (b)
by employing the hotlist tool featured in the
client software. See id. ¶¶ 12.
7. An account holder may use the search
tools included in the Napster client software
to find MP3 files. See id. ¶¶ 10. The server-side application software maintains a search
index that is updated in real time as users
log-on and -off of the system. See id.; 2
Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep.) at
56:3-10. The file-name index contains the
names of MP3 files that on-line users save in
their designated user library directories. See
Kessler Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7, 14; 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep.) at 55:14-56:10;
Exh.
2. Users who wish to search for a song or
artist may do so by entering the name of the
song or artist in the search fields of the client
software and then clicking the "Find It"
button. When the search form is transmitted
to the Napster network, the Napster servers
send the requesting user a list of files that
include the same term(s) she entered on the
search form. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 5; 2
Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep.) at
56:3-10.
After the application software returns a list
of specific MP3 file names to the requesting
user, the user then must peruse the list to
determine whether she desires any of those
files. See id. ¶¶ 10. She must read through
the list because the Napster application
software does not search for a particular
song or recording artist per se. Napster does
not organize MP3 files based on content
because, currently, they are not designed for
such indexing. See id. ¶¶ 11. Instead,
Napster performs a text search of the file
names indexed in a particular cluster. Those
file names may contain typographical errors
or otherwise inaccurate descriptions of the
content of the files since they are designated
by other users. See id. ¶¶¶¶ 13, 10, 27; 2
Pulgram Dec. Exh. B (Fanning Dep.) at
116:8-19.
In addition to listed text results from an
executed search, Napster''s servers provide
other information about particular MP3 files.
For instance, the client software can sort the
results of "echo packets" or "ping requests"
that it sends out to host users; these requests
help gauge the "responsiveness value" of a
transmission between two users by
calculating the amount of time it takes for
ping responses to be returned to the client
software. See 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E
(Kessler Dep.) at 56:3-10, Exh. 5 at 3;
Shawn Fanning Dec. ¶¶ 8. Users can also
search for files that meet certain technical
criteria, such as the host user''s bandwidth.
See id. Finally, the file name or "data object
description" includes the size and bytes
stored and "attributes of quality," such as bit
rate. See 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler
Dep.) at 153:16-154:24; Fanning Dec. ¶¶ 8.
These Napster options contribute to the ease
with which the user can locate and obtain the
music she wants.
8. Alternatively, users may access MP3 files
via the hotlist function. This function enables
a Napster user to archive other user names
and learn whether account holders who
access the network under those names are
online. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 8-9. A
requesting user can access or browse all files
listed in the user libraries of hotlisted users.
See id. ¶¶ 9. Then she can request a
particular file in a host user''s user library by
selecting, or clicking on, that file name. See
id. The hotlist function is a feature that helps
make Napster users a virtual
community----they are not only able to
download the music they desire, but also to
obtain files from particular individuals whom
they know by user name.
9. The Napster network facilitates the same
mode of file-transfer, whether a requesting
user accesses a specific MP3 file with the
search engine or the hotlist. See id. ¶¶ 12.
Once a requesting user locates and selects
the file she wishes to download, the server-side software engages in a dialogue with her
browser and that of the "host user" (that is,
the user who makes the MP3 available for
downloading). See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 12; 2
Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep.) at
80:19-22; 56:3-10. Napster servers obtain
the necessary IP address information from
the host user. See Daniel Farmer Dec. ¶¶ 17;
Frackman Dec., Exh. 1 (Kessler Dep.) at
103-05. The servers then communicate the
host user''s address or routing information
to the requesting user; the requesting user''s
computer employs this information to
establish a connection with the host user''s
browser software and download the MP3 file
from the host user''s library. See Kessler
Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 10-13; 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E
(Kessler Dep.) at 56:3-10. The content of the
actual MP3 file is transferred over the
Internet between users, not through the
Napster servers. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 12;
A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc., 2000
WL 573136, at *7 (N.D. Cal. May 12,
2000). However, users would not be able to
access the uploaded file names and
corresponding routing data without signing
on to the Napster system. See Kessler Dec.
¶¶ 23.
10. In some instances, a requested file is not
immediately ready for download. Those files
are "queued" or deferred until the host user
is able to transmit the file. See 2 Frackman
Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep. at 80:2-22). The
request may be deferred, for example,
because the host user has limited the number
of downloads she can provide
simultaneously, or because the host user has
signed off the Napster network. See id.
Defendant employs technology that permits
users to resume queued downloads at a later
time. See 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler
Dep.) at 112:3-13. Every MP3 file has a
mathematically-generated and unique
fingerprint or "checksum." See Kessler Dec.
¶¶ 32; 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler
Dep.) at 112:3-13. Any requesting user who
is unable to download a particular MP3 file
may use the client software to send the file''s
checksum and full intended size to the
Napster servers and attempt to locate a
match for download. See 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. E (Kessler Dep.) at 112:3-13.
11. Defendant also provides Napster users
with a chat service. Its central servers permit
users who are logged-on to communicate
with other online users, including those
whose user names comprise the hotlist. See
Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 13. Aside from
communicating with specific online users
logged-on to the same cluster of servers, the
chat service allows users to communicate in
groups. Defendant organizes these groups
within "channels" or "chat rooms" named
after particular musical genres. See id.; 2
Pulgram Dec., Exh. B (2 Fanning Dep.) at
219: 4-14. Alternatively, users can create
their own channels in which to communicate.
See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 13.
12. Defendant''s New Artist Program
technology functions in two interrelated
environments: (a) on its Internet website and
(b) through its network-client browser and
search technology. See Krause Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 9-15. The website version performs several
functions. It allows new or unsigned artists
to create a "profile" that consists of certain
biographical and descriptive data including
artist and band names, similar artists or
influences, and news about the band. See id.
¶¶¶¶ 9-10, Exh. C. Defendant only accepts
completed forms if the submitting artist
authorizes Napster users to share his music.
See id. ¶¶ 10, Exh. D. Once defendant
accepts the profile, it stores all of the
relevant information in a database linked to
its Internet website. See id. ¶¶ 11. Defendant
has accepted several thousand such profiles.
See id. ¶¶¶¶ 9, 16.
Members of the public can then search the
new artist database in several ways: (1) by
artist name, (2) by artist influence, or (3) by
browsing the different genres of music and
then scrolling down lists of new artists
categorized in those genres. See id. ¶¶ 12.
The Napster site does not store any of the
new artists'' music, however. See id. ¶¶ 9.
Instead, those who access the website-based
service acquire information about an artist,
such as his name. See id., Exh. E. Once an
individual obtains this data, she is directed to
switch to Napster''s software- and network-based service to search for and download the
new artist''s music. See id. ¶¶ 15.
Napster account holders who use
MusicShare software and log-on to the
Napster system can locate and download
new artists'' songs in the same manner they
would find and download any other files: by
utilizing the search engine, or by browsing
user libraries. See id. ¶¶ 9. While on the
Napster network, both new artists and other
users may use the chat function to market
music directly or learn about new artists. See
id. ¶¶¶¶ 8, 15.
D. Plaintiffs'' Business
The music publisher plaintiffs compose
music and write songs. See, e.g.,
Stoller Dec. ¶¶ 2. They depend
financially upon the sale of sound
recordings because they earn
royalties from such sales. See id. at
¶¶¶¶ 2, 11, 13. However, they do not
get a royalty when a Napster user
uploads or downloads an MP3 file of
their compositions without payment
or authorization. See id. ¶¶ 11. The
record company plaintiffs'' sound
recordings also result from a
substantial investment of money,
time, manpower, and creativity. See
Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 5; Cottrell Dec. 5;
Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 5, 21; Kenswil
Dec. ¶¶ 5.
In contrast, defendant invests nothing in the
content of the music which means that,
compared with plaintiffs, it incurs virtually
no costs in providing a wide array of music
to satisfy consumer demand. See Teece Rep.
at 14.
2. To make a profit, the record company
plaintiffs largely rely on the success of "hit"
or popular recordings, which may constitute
as little as ten or fifteen percent of albums
released. See, e.g., Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 7.
Many, or all, of their top recordings have
been available for free on Napster. See Frank
Creighton Dec. ¶¶ 5.
3. The record company plaintiffs have
invested substantial time, effort, and funds in
actual or planned entry into the digital
downloading market. BMG Music
("BMG")11 began to explore digital
downloading in early 1996 and has made
more than twenty tracks commercially
available for downloading through the digital
service providers ("DSPs") Amplified.com
and the Liquid Music Network. See Conroy
Dec. ¶¶ 9. BMG has entered several business
partnerships, strategic marketing agreements,
and clearinghouse relationships to develop a
plan for secure, commercial digital
downloading; July 2000 was the target date
for BMG''s launch. See id. at ¶¶¶¶ 10-17.
Plaintiffs Capitol Record, Inc. and Virgin
Records America are affiliated with EMI
Recorded Music, North America ("EMI").
See Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ 1. EMI has developed
business plans to distribute its music through
several DSPs which represent more than 800
retail websites. See id. ¶¶ 7. All digital
downloads that EMI offers will be encrypted
and watermarked. See id. ¶¶ 12.
Sony Music Entertainment ("Sony") has
already begun to make selected singles
available through its websites and those of its
artists; to obtain a permanent copy of this
music, consumers must pay for the
download. See Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 13. As of
May 31, 2000, Sony also began selling
downloadable music through a distribution
network of about thirty-five retail sites. See
id. at ¶¶ 17.
Plaintiffs A&M Records, Geffen Records,
Interscope Records, Island Records, MCA
Records, Motown Records, UMG Records,
and Universal Records (collectively,
"Universal") have spent millions of dollars
preparing a secure digital distribution system
scheduled for launch in mid-summer 2000.
See Kenswil Dec. ¶¶ 9-16.
Warner Music Group and its associated
labels----plaintiffs Atlantic Recording
Corp., London-Sire Records Inc. (f/k/a Sire
Records Group Inc.), Elektra Entertainment
Group Inc., and Warner Bros. Records
(collectively, "Warner")----have done due
diligence and dedicated a substantial budget
to digital distribution. See Vidich Dec. ¶¶
7(a)-(e). Warner expects to launch its
commercial digital distribution of hundreds
of recordings by the fourth quarter of 2000.
See id. at ¶¶ 7(e)
4. Promotional samples offered by plaintiffs
and other retail sites differ significantly from
using Napster to decide whether to buy a
CD. The record company plaintiffs have
made some free downloads available but
have limited them in amount and duration.
They have not provided entire albums, and
the downloads typically have been "timed-out" so that users can only play them for a
finite period of time----often less than a
month. See Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 9-17; Cottrell
Dec. ¶¶ 15; Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 13; Kenswil
Dec. ¶¶ 12; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7(d), 8.
Although plaintiffs have not been completely
successful in managing the rights to
promotional downloads, record company
executives accord importance to the security
of music distributed in this manner.12 See
Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 9-17; Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ 15;
Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 13; Kenswil Dec. ¶¶ 12;
Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7(d), 8.
Retail sites, such as Amazon.com, offer
thirty-to-sixty-second song samples in
streaming audio format, rather than as
downloads. See David Lambert Reply Dec.
¶¶ 2. Unlike downloading, streaming does
not copy the music onto the listener''s
computer hard drive; it merely allows her to
hear it. See id. Because companies like
DiscoverMusic that provide song samples to
these Internet retailers enter licensing
agreements, rights holders earn royalties
from this form of sampling. See id. ¶¶ 3.
In contrast, persons who obtain MP3 files
for free using Napster can retain and play
them indefinitely----and, even if they
download a song to make a purchasing
decision, they may decide not to buy the
music. While Napster users can burn CDs
comprised of unauthorized downloads they
obtained to "sample" new songs, sampling on
sites affiliated with plaintiffs does not
substitute for purchasing the entire disc. See
Teece Rep. at 17.
E. Effect of Napster on the Market
for Plaintiffs'' Copyrighted Works
1. The court finds that Napster use is likely
to reduce CD purchases by college students,
whom defendant admits constitute a key
demographic. See Jay Rep. at 4,18; Michael
Fine Rep. at 1; Julia Greer Reply Dec.
(Brooks Dep.) at 145:10-12 ("We believes
[sic] ourselves to have a high college
demographic, and beyond that to be
primarily [ages] 12 to 24."). Plaintiffs''
expert, Dr. E. Deborah Jay, opined that
forty-one percent of her college-student
survey respondents "gave a reason for using
Napster or described the nature of its impact
on their music purchases in a way which
either explicitly indicated or suggested that
Napster displaces CD sales." Jay Rep. at 4,
18. She also found that twenty-one percent
of the college students surveyed revealed
that Napster helped them make a better
selection or decide what to buy. See id., Tbl.
4. However, Jay''s overall conclusion was
that "[t]he more songs Napster users have
downloaded," the more likely they are to
admit or imply that such use has reduced
their music purchases. See id. at 4, 18. The
report of Soundscan CEO Michael Fine
lends support to Jay''s findings. After
examining data culled from three types of
retail stores near college or university
campuses,13 Fine concluded that "on-line file
sharing has resulted in a loss of album sales
within college markets."14 Fine Rep. at 1.
For the reasons discussed in the court''s
separate order, the report by defendant''s
expert, Dr. Peter S. Fader, does not provide
credible evidence that music file-sharing on
Napster stimulates more CD sales than it
displaces.15 Nor do the recording industry
documents that defendant cites reliably show
increased music sales due to Napster use.
One such memorandum deals with the effect
of Warner''s promotional downloads, which
are "timed-out" and thus differ from MP3
files obtained using Napster. See 1 Pulgram
Dec., Exh. N (Vidich Dep.), Exh. 279 at
T3122-23; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7(d), 8 (stating
that free, promotional downloads are "timed-out."). Another purported "smoking gun" is
a Universal survey on music-purchasing by
people who download MP3 files. See 1
Pulgram Dec., Exh. F (Kenswil Dep.) at
110:22-111:15. However, the court has too
little information about this survey to rely on
it, and the deponent, Universal representative
Lawrence Kenswil, declined to vouch for the
survey''s accuracy. See id. at 111:8,14-15.
2. Because plaintiffs entered the digital
download market very recently, or plan to
enter it in the next few months, they are
especially vulnerable to direct competition
from Napster, Inc. See Teece Rep. at 15-16.
The court finds that, in choosing between the
free Napster service and pay-per-download
sites, consumers are likely to choose Napster. See id. at 14; Jay Rep. at 4,18
(reaching this conclusion with regard to a
survey sample of college students).
Defendant''s economic expert, Dr. Robert E.
Hall, opines that plaintiffs'' music could still
command a high price after a period when
the price has been zero due to Napster use;
thus, he concludes, plaintiffs will not suffer
irreparable harm between now and a trial
verdict against defendant. See Lisi Dec. (Hall
Rep.) ¶¶¶¶ 39, 54. This argument does not
square with Hall''s assertion that
preliminarily enjoining defendant will put it
out of business because users will switch to
services offered by "kindred spirits." Hall
Rep. ¶¶ 15-19, 73; see also Barry Dec. ¶¶
13. If this is true, consumers will not
necessarily resume buying music if Napster is
enjoined; rather, they will go to other sites
offering free MP3 files.16 Indeed, as Dr.
David J. Teece avers, defendant has
contributed to a new attitude that digitally-downloaded songs ought to be free----an
attitude that creates formidable hurdles for
the establishment of a commercial
downloading market. See Teece Rep. at 14-18.
Hall also maintains that Napster, Inc. will
increase the volume of plaintiffs'' online
sales by stimulating consumer investment in
the hardware and software needed to obtain
and play MP3 files. See Hall Rep. ¶¶¶¶ 45-49. However, he ignores evidence of reduced
CD-buying among college students due to
Napster use, see Jay Rep. at 18, and the data
upon which he relies to argue that Napster
has enhanced sales is either weak (in the case
of the Fader Report) or unavailable for the
court''s review. See, e.g., id. ¶¶ 17 (relying
on IDC and Forrester Research studies),
¶¶¶¶ 27-28 (discussing reports by Student
Monitor and Andersen Consulting), ¶¶ 34
(citing a study by the University of Southern
California). The court therefore finds that the
barriers to commercial distribution posed by
an emerging sense of entitlement to free
music probably outweigh the benefits that
defendant purports to confer.
3. Downloading on Napster also has the
potential to disrupt plaintiffs'' promotional
efforts because it does not involve any of the
restrictions on timing, amount, or selection
that plaintiffs impose when they offer free
music files. See Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 9-17;
Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ 15; Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 13;
Kenswil Dec. ¶¶ 12; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7(d),
8; see also Teece Rep. at 18. Even if Napster
users sometimes download files to determine
whether they want to purchase a CD,
sampling on Napster is vastly different than
that offered by plaintiffs. On Napster, the
user----not the copyright
owner----determines how much music to
sample and how long to keep it.
II. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
A. Legal Standard
1. The Ninth Circuit authorizes preliminary
injunctive relief for "a party who
demonstrates either (1) a combination of
probable success on the merits and the
possibility of irreparable harm, or (2) that
serious questions are raised and the balance
of hardships tips in its favor." Prudential Real
Estate Affiliates, Inc. v. PPR Realty, Inc.,
204 F.3d 867, 874 (9th Cir. 2000).
2. The standard is a sliding scale which
requires a greater degree of harm the lesser the
probability of success. See id. In a copyright
infringement case, demonstration of a
reasonable likelihood of success on the merits
creates a presumption of irreparable harm.17
See Micro Star v. Formgen, Inc., 154 F.3d
1107, 1109 (9th Cir. 1998).
B. Proof of Direct Infringement
1. To prevail on a contributory or vicarious
copyright infringement claim, a plaintiff must
show direct infringement by a third party.
See Sony Corp. of Am. v. Universal City
Studios, Inc., 464 U.S. 417, 434 (1984). As
a threshold matter, plaintiffs in this action
must demonstrate that Napster users are
engaged in direct infringement.
2. Plaintiffs have established a prima facie
case of direct copyright infringement. As
discussed above, virtually all Napster users
engage in the unauthorized downloading or
uploading of copyrighted music; as much as
eighty-seven percent of the files available on
Napster may be copyrighted, and more than
seventy percent may be owned or
administered by plaintiffs. See Olkin Rep. at
7; Hausman Dec. ¶¶ 8.
C. Affirmative Defense of Fair Use
and Substantial Non-Infringing
Use
1. Defendant asserts the affirmative defenses
of fair use and substantial non-infringing use.
The latter defense is also known as the staple
article of commerce doctrine. See Sony, 464
U.S. at 442. Sony stands for the rule that a
manufacturer is not liable for selling a "staple
article of commerce" that is "capable of
commercially significant noninfringing uses."
Id. The Supreme Court also declared in
Sony, "Any individual may reproduce a
copyrighted work for a ''fair use''; the
copyright holder does not possess the
exclusive right to such a use." Id. at 433.
Defendant bears the burden of proving these
affirmative defenses. See Bateman v.
Mnemonics, Inc., 79 F.3d 1532, 1542 n.22
(11th Cir. 1996) ("[I]t is clear the burden of
proving fair use is always on the putative infringer.").
2. For the reasons set forth below, the court
finds that any potential non-infringing use of
the Napster service is minimal or connected
to the infringing activity, or both. The
substantial or commercially significant use of
the service was, and continues to be, the
unauthorized downloading and uploading of
popular music, most of which is copyrighted.
3. Section 107 of the Copyright Act provides
a non-exhaustive list of fair use factors.
These factors include:
(1) the purpose and character
of the use, including whether
such use is of a commercial
nature or is for nonprofit
educational purposes;
(2)the nature of the
copyrighted work;
(3)the amount and
substantiality of the portion
used in relation to the
copyrighted work as a whole;
and
(4)the effect of the use upon
the potential market for or
value of the copyrighted
work.
17 U.S.C. §§ 107.
4. In the instant action, the purpose and
character of the use militates against a
finding of fair use. Ascertaining whether the
new work transforms the copyrighted
material satisfies the main goal of the first
factor. See Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music,
Inc., 510 U.S. 569, 579 (1994). Plaintiff
persuasively argues that downloading MP3
files does not transform the copyrighted
music. See UMG Recordings, Inc. v.
MP3.com, Inc., 92 F. Supp.2d 349, 351 (S.D.N.Y. 2000) (concluding that
repackaging copyrighted recordings in MP3
format suitable for downloading "adds no
''new aesthetics, new insights and
understandings'' to the original").
5. Under the first factor, the court must also
determine whether the use is commercial. In Acuff-Rose, the Supreme Court clarified that
a finding of commercial use weighs against,
but does not preclude, a determination of
fairness. See Acuff-Rose, 510 U.S. at 584.
6. If a use is non-commercial, the plaintiff
bears the burden of showing a meaningful
likelihood that it would adversely affect the
potential market for the copyrighted work if it
became widespread. See Sony, 464 U.S. at
451.
7. Although downloading and uploading
MP3 music files is not paradigmatic
commercial activity, it is also not personal
use in the traditional sense. Plaintiffs have
not shown that the majority of Napster users
download music to sell----that is, for profit.
However, given the vast scale of Napster use
among anonymous individuals, the court
finds that downloading and uploading MP3
music files with the assistance of Napster are
not private uses. At the very least, a host
user sending a file cannot be said to engage
in a personal use when distributing that file
to an anonymous requester. Moreover, the
fact that Napster users get for free something
they would ordinarily have to buy suggests
that they reap economic advantages from
Napster use. See Sega Enters. Ltd. v. MAPHIA, 857 F. Supp. 679, 687 (N.D. Cal.
1994) ("Sega I") (holding that copying to
save users expense of purchasing authorized
copies has commercial character and thus
weighs against finding of fair use); cf.
American Geophysical Union v. Texaco,
Inc., 60 F.3d 913, 922 (2d Cir. 1994)
(holding that for-profit enterprise which
made unauthorized copies of scholarly
articles to facilitate scientific research reaped
indirect economic advantage from copying
and, hence, that copying constituted
commercial use).
8. The court finds that the copyrighted
musical compositions and sound recordings
are creative in nature; they constitute
entertainment, which cuts against a finding of
fair use under the second factor. See Harper
& Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters.,
471 U.S. 539, 563 (1985); Sega I, 857 F.
Supp. at 687; Playboy Enters., Inc. v. Frena,
839 F. Supp. 1552, 1558 (M.D. Fla. 1993)
(citing In re New Era Publications Int''l v.
Carol Publ''g, 904 F.2d 152, 157-58 (2d
Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 921 (1990)).
9. With regard to the third factor, it is
undisputed that downloading or uploading
MP3 music files involves copying the
entirety of the copyrighted work. The Ninth
Circuit held prior to Sony that "wholesale
copying of copyrighted material precludes
application of the fair use doctrine." Marcus
v. Rowley, 695 F.2d 1171, 1176 (9th Cir.
1983). Even after Sony, wholesale copying
for private home use tips the fair use analysis
in plaintiffs'' favor if such copying is likely to
adversely affect the market for the
copyrighted material. See Sony, 464 U.S. at
449-50, 456.
10. The fourth factor, the effect on the
potential market for the copyrighted work,
also weighs against a finding of fair use.
Plaintiffs have produced evidence that
Napster use harms the market for their
copyrighted musical compositions and sound
recordings in at least two ways. First, it
reduces CD sales among college students.
See Jay Rep. at 4, 18; cf. Fine Rep. at 1.
Second, it raises barriers to plaintiffs'' entry
into the market for the digital downloading
of music. See Teece Rep. at 12-18.
11. Defendant asserts several potential fair
uses of the Napster service----including
sampling, space-shifting, and the authorized
distribution of new artists'' work. Sampling
on Napster is not a personal use in the
traditional sense that courts have
recognized----copying which occurs within
the household and does not confer any
financial benefit on the user. See, e.g, Sony,
464 U.S. at 423, 449-50. Instead, sampling
on Napster amounts to obtaining permanent
copies of songs that users would otherwise
have to purchase; it also carries the potential
for viral distribution to millions of people.
Defendant ignores critical differences
between sampling songs on Napster and
VCR usage in Sony. First, while "time-shifting [TV broadcasts] merely enables a
viewer to see . . . a work which he ha[s] been
invited to witness in its entirety free of
charge," plaintiffs in this action almost
always charge for their music---- even if it
is downloaded song-by-song. Sony, 464 U.S.
at 449-50; see e.g., Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 9;
Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 16. They only make
promotional downloads available on a highly
restricted basis. See Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 9-17;
Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ 15; Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 13;
Kenswil Dec. ¶¶ 12; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7(d),
8. Copyright owners also earn royalties from
streamed song samples on retail websites like Amazon.com. See Lambert Reply Dec. ¶¶ 3.
Second, the majority of VCR purchasers in
Sony did not distribute taped television
broadcasts, but merely enjoyed them at
home. See id. at 423. In contrast, a Napster
user who downloads a copy of a song to her
hard drive may make that song available to
millions of other individuals, even if she
eventually chooses to purchase the CD. So-called sampling on Napster may quickly
facilitate unauthorized distribution at an
exponential rate.
Defendant''s argument that using Napster to
sample music is akin to visiting a free
listening station in a record store, or listening
to song samples on a retail website, fails to
convince the court because Napster users
can keep the music they download. Whether
or not they decide to buy the CD, they still
obtain a permanent copy of the song. In
contrast, many retail sites only offer thirty-to-sixty-second samples in streaming audio
format, see Lambert Reply Dec. ¶¶ 2, and
promotional downloads from the record
company plaintiffs are often "timed-out." See
Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ 15; Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 13;
Kenswil Dec. ¶¶ 12; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7(d),
8.
The global scale of Napster usage and the
fact that users avoid paying for songs that
otherwise would not be free militates against
a determination that sampling by Napster
users constitutes personal or home use in the
traditional sense.18
12. Even if the type of sampling supposedly
done on Napster were a non-commercial use,
plaintiffs have demonstrated a substantial
likelihood that it would adversely affect the
potential market for their copyrighted works
if it became widespread. See Sony, 464 U.S.
at 451. Plaintiffs claim three general types of
harm: a decrease in retail sales, especially
among college students; an obstacle to the
record company plaintiffs'' future entry into
the digital downloading market; and a social
devaluing of music stemming from its free
distribution. With regard to sampling,
twenty-one percent of the Jay survey
respondents indicated that Napster helps
them decide what music to purchase. See Jay
Rep., Tbl. 4. Nevertheless, Jay reached the
overarching conclusion that the more songs
Napster users download, the more likely they
are to reveal that such use reduces their
music buying. See id. at 4, 18. Jay''s
evidence suggests that sampling and building
a free music library through unauthorized
downloading are not mutually exclusive: it is
likely that survey respondents who sample
are primarily direct infringers. Napster
users----not the record
companies----control the music selection,
the amount and the timing of the sampling
activity, and they may keep many songs after
deciding not to purchase the entire CD.
Defendant maintains that sampling does not
decrease retail music sales and may even
stimulate them. To support this assertion, it
relies heavily on the Fader Report, which
concludes that consumers do not view MP3
files as perfect substitutes for CDs. See Lisi
Dec. (Fader Rep.) ¶¶ 63. Fader cites a survey
that he did not conduct for the assertion that
"60% of online users who download free
digital music do so to preview music before
buying the CD." Fader Rep. ¶¶ 74.
Examining the results of a different survey
that he purportedly designed, but did not
carefully supervise, he reports that about
twenty-eight percent of Napster users
indicate that their music purchases have
increased since they began using the Napster
software. See id. ¶¶ 43. For reasons
explained in the court''s evidentiary order,
the Fader Report is unreliable and fails to
rebut plaintiffs'' showing of harm. Plaintiffs
have demonstrated a meaningful likelihood
that the activity defendant calls sampling
actually decreases retail sales of their music.
13. Any potential enhancement of plaintiffs''
sales due to sampling would not tip the fair
use analysis conclusively in favor of
defendant. Indeed, courts have rejected the
suggestion that a positive impact on sales
negates the copyright holder''s entitlement
to licensing fees or access to derivative
markets. See Ringgold v. Black
Entertainment Television, 126 F.3d 70, 81
n.16 (2d Cir. 1997) (noting that, even if
allegedly infringing use of plaintiff''s poster
in television program increased poster sales,
plaintiff retained right to licensing fee); DC
Comics, Inc. v. Reel Fantasy, Inc., 696 F.2d
24, 28 (2d Cir. 1982) (stating that speculated
increase in plaintiff''s comic book sales due
to unauthorized use of Batman and Green
Arrow figures on advertising flyers did not
establish fair use defense as matter of law);
MP3.com, 92 F. Supp. 2d at 352 (holding
that allegedly positive impact on plaintiffs''
prior market "in no way frees defendant to
usurp a further market that directly derives
from reproduction of [the] copyrighted
works.").
The MP3.com opinion is especially
instructive. Although MP3.com''s activities
arguably stimulated CD sales, the plaintiffs
"adduced substantial evidence that they . . .
[had] taken steps to enter [the digital
downloading market]." MP3.com, 92 F.
Supp. 2d at 352. The fourth factor thus
weighed against a finding of fair use.
Plaintiffs in the instant action similarly allege
that Napster use impedes their entry into the
online market. The record company plaintiffs
have already expended considerable funds
and effort to commence Internet sales and
licensing for digital downloads. See Conroy
Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 9-18; Cottrell Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 6-17;
Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 9-22; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶
7-10. Plaintiffs'' economic expert opined
that the availability of free MP3 files will
reduce the market for authorized,
commercial downloading. See Teece Dec. at
14-18. This point is corroborated by the fact
that all forty-nine songs available for
purchase on Sony''s website can be obtained
for free using Napster. See Eisenberg Dec.
¶¶ 16. If consumers choose to buy, rather
than burn, entire CDs they are still more
likely to obtain permanent copies of songs on
Napster than buy them from Sony''s site or
listen to streamed samples at other online
locations.
The court concludes that, even assuming the
sampling alleged in this case is a non-commercial use, the record company
plaintiffs have demonstrated a meaningful
likelihood that it would adversely affect their
entry into the online market if it became
widespread. See Sony, 464 U.S. at 451.
Moreover, it deprives the music publisher
plaintiffs of royalties for individual songs.
The unauthorized downloading of plaintiffs''
music to sample songs would not constitute
a fair use, even if it enhanced CD sales.
14. The court is also unconvinced that Sony
applies to space-shifting. Defendant
erroneously relies on the Ninth Circuit''s
assertion, in a case involving an inapplicable
statute, that space-shifting constitutes
noncommercial personal use. See Recording
Indus. Ass''n of Am. v. Diamond
Multimedia Sys., Inc., 180 F.3d 1072, 1079
(9th Cir. 1999) (discussing the applicability
of the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992
to the Rio MP3 player).19 Defendant also
implies that space-shifting music is
sufficiently analogous to time-shifting
television broadcasts to merit the protection
of Sony. According to the gravely flawed
Fader Report, space-shifting----like time-shifting----leaves the value of the
copyrights unscathed because it does not
displace sales. See Fader Rep. ¶¶ 77; Sony,
464 U.S. at 421 (concluding that plaintiffs
did not prove that time-shifting created any
likelihood of harm). Defendant again cites
Fader for the statistic that seventy percent of
Napster users at least sometimes engage in
space-shifting. See Lisi Dec. (Fader Rep.) ¶¶
77. In contrast, Jay opined that
approximately forty-nine percent of her
college-student survey respondents
previously owned less than ten percent of the
songs they downloaded, and about sixty-nine
percent owned less than a quarter. See Jay
Rep. at 4, 21 & Tbl. 7. The court has already
held that the Jay Report bears greater indicia
of reliability than the Fader Report.
Moreover, under either analysis, the instant
matter is distinguishable from Sony because
the Supreme Court determined in Sony that
time-shifting represented the principal,
rather than an occasional use of VCRs. See
Sony, 464 U.S. at 421.
15. Defendant argues that, if space-shifting is
deemed a fair use, the staple article of
commerce doctrine precludes liability for
contributory or vicarious infringement.
Under Sony, the copyright holder cannot
extend his monopoly to products "capable of
substantial noninfringing uses." Sony, 464
U.S. at 442. Defendant fails to show that
space-shifting constitutes a commercially
significant use of Napster. Indeed, the most
credible explanation for the exponential
growth of traffic to the website is the vast
array of free MP3 files offered by other
users----not the ability of each individual to
space-shift music she already owns. Thus,
even if space-shifting is a fair use, it is not
substantial enough to preclude liability under
the staple article of commerce doctrine. See
Cable/Home Communication Corp. v.
Network Prods., Inc., 902 F.2d 829, 846
(11th Cir. 1990) (affirming finding of
contributory infringement where defendant
primarily promoted pirate computer chips
and other devices capable of descrambling
pay-TV broadcasts as infringement aids);
A&M Records v. General Audio Video
Cassettes, Inc., 948 F. Supp. 1449, 1456
(C.D. Cal. 1996) (rejecting Sony defense
because counterfeiting was chief purpose of
time-loaded cassettes that defendant sold).20
16. This court also declines to apply the
staple article of commerce doctrine because,
as paragraphs (D)(6) and (E)(2) of the legal
conclusions explain, Napster exercises
ongoing control over its service. In Sony, the
defendant''s participation did not extend past
manufacturing and selling the VCRs: "[t]he
only contact between Sony and the users of
the Betamax . . . occurred at the moment of
sale." Sony, 464 U.S. at 438. Here, in
contrast, Napster, Inc. maintains and
supervises an integrated system that users
must access to upload or download files.
Courts have distinguished the protection
Sony offers to the manufacture and sale of a
device from scenarios in which the defendant
continues to exercise control over the
device''s use. See General Audio Video, 948
F. Supp. at 1456-57 (finding Sony doctrine
inapplicable to seller of blank tapes who
"acted as a contact between his customers
and suppliers of other material necessary for
counterfeiting"); RCA Records v. All-Fast
Sys., Inc., 594 F. Supp. 335, 339 (S.D.N.Y.
1984) (holding that defendant in position to
control cassette-copying machine could not
invoke Sony); see also Columbia Pictures
Indus., Inc. v. Aveco, Inc., 800 F.2d 59, 62
& n.3 (3d Cir. 1986) (holding that business
which rented rooms where public viewed
copyrighted video cassettes engaged in
contributory infringement, even when it was
not source of cassettes). Napster, Inc.''s
facilitation of unauthorized file-sharing
smacks of the contributory infringement in
these cases, rather than the legitimate
conduct of the VCR manufacturers. Given
defendant''s control over the service, as
opposed to mere manufacturing or selling,
the existence of a potentially unobjectionable
use like space-shifting does not defeat
plaintiffs'' claims.
17. Nor do other potential non-infringing
uses of Napster preclude contributory or
vicarious liability. Defendant claims that it
engages in the authorized promotion of
independent artists, ninety-eight percent of
whom are not represented by the record
company plaintiffs. See Def.''s Opp. at 10
(citing, inter alia, Krause Dec. ¶¶ 16), 27.
However, the New Artist Program may not
represent a substantial or commercially
significant aspect of Napster. The evidence
suggests that defendant initially promoted
the availability of songs by major stars, as
opposed to "page after page of unknown
artists." See 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. C
(Parker Dep.) at 104:16-105:10, Exh. 235.
Its purported mission of distributing music
by artists unable to obtain record-label
representation appears to have been
developed later.
Other facts point to the conclusion that the
New Artists Program was an afterthought,
not a major aspect of the Napster business
plan. Former CEO Eileen Richardson
claimed in her deposition that she told the
press Napster is not about known artists like
Madonna. But, tellingly, discovery related to
downloads by Napster executives reveals
that Richardson''s own computer contained
about five Madonna files obtained using Napster. See 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. A
(Richardson Dep.) at 238:2-240:25.
Defendant did not launch the website aspect
of its New Artist Program until after
plaintiffs filed suit, and as recently as July
2000, bona fide new artists constituted a
very small percentage of music available on Napster. See Krause Dec. ¶¶ 9,
Exh. A;
Olkin Reply Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 3-5; Hausman Reply
Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 3-6.
In any event, Napster''s primary role of
facilitating the unauthorized copying and
distribution established artists'' songs
renders Sony inapplicable. See General
Audio Video, 948 F. Supp. at 1456-57; RCA
Records, 594 F. Supp. at 339.
18. Plaintiffs do not object to all of the
supposedly non-infringing uses of Napster.
They do not seek an injunction covering chat
rooms or message boards, the New Artist
Program or any distribution authorized by
rights holders. See Pl.''s Reply at 19. Nor do
they seek to enjoin applications unrelated to
the music recording industry.21 See id.
Because plaintiffs do not ask the court to
shut down such satellite activities, the fact
that these activities may be non-infringing
does not lessen plaintiffs'' likelihood of
success. The court therefore finds that
plaintiffs have established a reasonable
probability of proving third-party
infringement.
D. Contributory Copyright
Infringement
1. Once they have shown direct infringement
by Napster users, plaintiffs must demonstrate
a likelihood of success on their contributory
infringement claim. A contributory infringer
is "one who, with knowledge of the
infringing activity, induces, causes or
materially contributes to the infringing
conduct of another." Gershwin Publ''g Corp.
v. Columbia Artists Management, Inc., 443
F.2d 1159, 1162 (2d Cir. 1971); see Fonovisa, Inc. v. Cherry Auction, Inc., 76
F.3d 259, 264 (9th Cir. 1996). Courts do not
require actual knowledge; rather, a defendant
incurs contributory copyright liability if he
has reason to know of the third party''s
direct infringement. See Cable/Home
Communication Corp., 902 F.2d at 846;
Sega Enter. Ltd. v. MAPHIA, 948 F. Supp.
923, 933 (N.D. Cal. 1996) ("Sega II").
Plaintiffs present convincing evidence
that Napster executives actually
knew about and sought to protect
use of the service to transfer illegal
MP3 files. For example, a document
authored by co-founder Sean Parker
mentions the need to remain ignorant
of users'' real names and IP
addresses "since they are exchanging
pirated music." 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. C (Parker Dep.) at 160:1-162:14,
Exh. 254 at SF00100
(emphasis added). The same
document states that, in bargaining
with the RIAA, defendant will benefit
from the fact that "we are not just
making pirated music available but
also pushing demand." Id. at 160:1-162:14, Exh. 254 at SF00102
(emphasis added). These admissions
suggest that facilitating the
unauthorized exchange of
copyrighted music was a central part
of Napster, Inc.''s business strategy
from the inception.
Plaintiff also demonstrate that defendant had
actual notice of direct infringement because
the RIAA informed it of more than 12,000
infringing files. See Creighton 12/3/99 Dec., Exh. D. Although Napster, Inc. purportedly
terminated the users offering these files, the
songs are still available using the Napster
service, as are the copyrighted works which
the record company plaintiffs identified in
Schedules A and B of their complaint. See
Creighton Supp. Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 3-4.
3. The law does not require actual
knowledge of specific acts of infringement.
See Gershwin, 443 F.2d at 1163 (holding
that general knowledge that third parties
performed copyrighted works satisfied
knowledge element of contributory
infringement); Sega I, 857 F. Supp. at 686-87 (concluding that plaintiffs established
knowledge element, even though electronic
bulletin board company did not know exactly
when infringing video games would be
uploaded to or downloaded from bulletin
board). Accordingly, the court rejects
defendant''s argument that titles in the
Napster directory cannot be used to
distinguish infringing from non-infringing
files and thus that defendant cannot know
about infringement by any particular user of
any particular musical recording or
composition. See Lisi Dec. (Tygar Rep.) at
29 (offering expert opinion about difficulty
of identifying copyrighted works by file
name); Lars Ulrich Dep. at 36:16-37:2
(stating that in the past he did not object to
individuals taping his band''s concerts and
making MP3 files of such concerts available
via Napster); Sanders Dep. at 24:23-29:13
(discussing complex process for determining
chain of title for copyright owners).22
4. Defendant''s reliance on Religious
Technology Center v. Netcom Online
Communication Services, Inc., 907 F. Supp.
1361 (N.D. Cal. 1995), does not alter the
court''s conclusion that plaintiffs have a
reasonable likelihood of proving contributory
liability. The cited passage from Religious
Technology Center states:
Where a BBS [bulletin board service]
operator cannot reasonably verify a
claim of infringement, either because
of a possible fair use defense, the lack
of copyright notices on the copies, or
the copyright holder''s failure to
provide the necessary documentation
to show that there is likely
infringement, the operator''s lack of
knowledge will be found reasonable
and there will be no liability for
contributory infringement for
allowing the continued distribution of
the works on its system.
Id. at 1374. This language is dicta because
the plaintiffs in Religious Technology Center
raised a genuine issue of material fact
regarding knowledge. More importantly,
Napster is not an Internet service provider
that acts as a mere conduit for the transfer of
files. See A&M Records v. Napster, Inc.,
2000 WL 57136, at *6, 8 (N.D. Cal. May
12, 2000). Rather, it offers search and
directory functions specifically designed to
allow users to locate music, the majority of
which is copyrighted. See id. at *6. Thus,
even if dicta from another federal district
court were binding, Religious Technology
Center would not mandate a determination
that Napster, Inc. lacks the knowledge
requisite to contributory infringement.
5. At the very least, defendant had
constructive knowledge of its users'' illegal
conduct. Some Napster executives boast
recording industry experience, see 1
Frackman Dec. (Ricardson Dep.), Exh. 129
at ER00138, and defendant does not dispute
that it possessed enough sophistication about
intellectual property laws to sue a rock band
that copied its logo. See 2 Frackman Dec., Exh. M (online news article about court
proceedings to halt The Offspring''s use of
Napster logo).23 The evidence indicates that
Napster executives downloaded infringing
material to their own computers using the
service and promoted the website with
screen shots listing infringing files. See 2
Frackman Dec., Exh. D (Brooks Dep.) at
51:8-24, 54:25-56:11, Exh. 64 at 2-4, Exh.
126 at 002260, 002263; 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. A (Richardson Dep.) at 20:5-22:10,
25:2-26:1; Exh. C (Parker Dep.) at 70:14-16, Exh. 230, ¶¶ 3-5; Exh. B (Fanning Dep.),
Exhs. 174-76. Such conduct satisfies the
objective test for constructive
knowledge----defendant had reason to
know about infringement by third parties.
See Cable/Home Communication Corp., 902
F.2d at 846.24
6. Plaintiffs have also shown that defendant
materially contributed to the infringing
activity. In Fonovisa, the owners of
copyrights for musical recordings stated a
contributory infringement claim against the
operators of a swap meet at which
independent vendors sold counterfeit
recordings. See Fonovisa, 76 F.3d at 264.
The Ninth Circuit held the copyright
owners'' allegations were "sufficient to show
material contribution" because "it would
have been difficult for the infringing activity
to take place in the massive quantities
alleged without the support services
provided by the swap meet." Id. According
to plaintiffs in the instant action, "Napster is
essentially an Internet swap meet----more
technologically sophisticated but in many
ways indistinguishable from the [defendant]
in Fonovisa." Pl.''s Br. at 6. The court
largely agrees with this characterization.
Unlike the swap meet vendors, Napster users
offer their infringing music for free.
However, defendant''s material contribution
is still analogous to that of the swap meet in Fonovisa. The swap meet provided support
services like parking, booth space,
advertising, and clientele. See Fonovisa, 76
F.3d at 264. Here, Napster, Inc. supplies the
proprietary software, search engine, servers,
and means of establishing a connection
between users'' computers. Without the
support services defendant provides, Napster
users could not find and download the music
they want with the ease of which defendant
boasts.
Several contributory infringement cases
involving online services are in accord with
the court''s conclusion that defendant
materially contributes to the infringing
activity. For example in Sega II, an
electronic bulletin board service acted as a
central depository for unauthorized copies of
computer games and materially contributed
to infringement because it provided software,
hardware, and phone lines needed for
uploading and downloading copyrighted
material. See Sega II, 948 F. Supp. at 933.
Similarly, in Religious Technology Center, a
case defendant ignores when convenient, a
court in this district stated that an Internet
access provider is not a mere landlord;
rather, it exerts control akin to a radio
station replaying infringing broadcasts. See
Religious Tech. Ctr., 907 F. Supp. at 1375
(holding that plaintiffs raised genuine issue of
material fact as to service provider''s
substantial participation).
Defendant marshals two district court cases
in an attempt to rebut plaintiffs'' argument
about material contribution. See Intellectual
Reserve, Inc. v. Utah Lighthouse Ministry,
75 F. Supp. 2d 1290, 1293 (D. Utah 1999)
(holding that posting links to infringing
websites did not contribute to infringement
by those websites'' operators); Bernstein v.
J.C. Penny, Inc., 50 U.S.P.Q. 2d 1063 (C.D.
Cal. 1998) (paraphrasing defendant''s
apparently successful argument that
"multiple linking does not constitute
substantial participation in any infringement
where the linking website does not mention
the fact that Internet users could, by
following the links, find infringing material
on another website"). The Bernstein court
offered no reasoning for its dismissal of the
complaint. Neither case is factually apposite,
for Napster provides its users with much
more than hyperlinking; Napster is an
integrated service designed to enable users to
locate and download MP3 music files. In
keeping with its view that Napster, Inc. plays
a more active role in facilitating file-sharing
than an Internet service provider acting as a
passive conduit, this court finds it probable
that defendant materially contributed to
unlawful conduct.
7. Because they have made a convincing
showing with regard to both the knowledge
and material contribution elements, plaintiffs
have established a reasonable likelihood of
success on their contributory infringement
claims.
E. Vicarious Copyright
Infringement
1. Even in the absence of an employment
relationship, a defendant incurs liability for
vicarious copyright infringement if he "has
the right and ability to supervise the
infringing activity and also has a direct
financial interest in such activities." Fonovisa, 76 F.3d at 262 (quoting
Gershwin,
443 F.2d at 1162).
2. In Fonovisa, the swap meet operator
satisfied the first element of vicarious liability
because it had the right to terminate vendors
at will; it also controlled customers'' access
and promoted its services. See id. Although Napster, Inc. argues that it is technologically
difficult, and perhaps infeasible, to
distinguish legal and illegal conduct,
plaintiffs have shown that defendant
supervises Napster use. Indeed, Napster, Inc.
itself takes pains to inform the court of its
improved methods of blocking users about
whom rights holders complain. See Def.''s Opp. Br. at 19 (citing Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 22),
33 (citing Kessler Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 23-24). This is
tantamount to an admission that defendant
can, and sometimes does, police its service.
See Religious Tech. Ctr., 907 F. Supp. at
1376 (concluding that evidence that Internet
access provider acted to suspend
subscribers'' accounts and could delete
specific postings raised genuine issue of
material fact about vicarious liability).
Moreover, a defendant need not exercise its
supervisory powers to be deemed capable of
doing so. See Gershwin, 443 F.2d at 1161-63. The court therefore finds that
Napster,
Inc. has the right and ability to supervise its
users'' infringing conduct.
3. Plaintiffs have shown a reasonable
likelihood that Napster, Inc. has a direct
financial interest in the infringing activity.
Citing several non-governing cases from
other districts, they contend that direct
financial benefit does not require earned
revenue, so long as the defendant has
economic incentives for tolerating unlawful
behavior. For instance, in Major Bob Music
v. Stubbs, 851 F. Supp. 475 (S.D. Ga.
1994), a bar derived direct financial benefit
from infringing musical performances on its
premises. The court noted that "an enterprise
is considered to be ''profit-making'' even if
it never actually yields a profit." Id. at 480;
see also Walden Music, Inc. v. C.H.W., Inc.,
1996 WL 254654, at *5 (D. Kan. 1996)
("The fact that defendant'' entrepreneurial
enterprise is not profiting is not a defense to
the plaintiffs'' copyright infringement
claims."); Broadcast Music, Inc. v. Hobi,
Inc., 1993 WL 404152, at *3 (M.D. La.
1993) (holding defendant vicariously liable
because it operated with goal of making a
profit, even though it did not actually make
one), aff''d 20 F.3d 1171 (5th Cir. 1994).
Although Napster, Inc. currently generates
no revenue, its internal documents state that
it "will drive [sic] revenues directly from
increases in userbase." 1 Frackman Dec.
(Parker Dep.), Exh. 251.25 The Napster
service attracts more and more users by
offering an increasing amount of quality
music for free. See, e.g, 1 Frackman Dec., Exh. A (Richardson Dep.) at 112:18-113:2.
It hopes to "monetize" its user base through
one of several generation revenue models
noted in the factual findings.
This is similar to the type of direct financial
interest the Ninth Circuit found sufficient for
vicarious liability in Fonovisa, where the
swap meet''s revenues flowed directly from
customers drawn by the availability of music
at bargain basement prices. See Fonovisa, 76
F.3d at 263-64; see also Famous Music
Corp. v. Bay State Harness Horse Racing
and Breeding Ass''n, 554 F.2d 1213, 1214
(1st Cir. 1977) (holding racing association
vicariously liable for infringing broadcast of
music to entertain race-goers "when they
were not absorbed in watching the races");
Playboy Enters., Inc. v. Webbworld, Inc.,
968 F. Supp. 1171, 1177 (N.D. Tex. 1997)
(holding defendant vicariously liable because "plaintiff''s photographs enhanced the
attractiveness of the Neptics'' website to
potential customers"); Polygram Int''l Publ''g, Inc. v. Nevada/TIG, Inc., 855 F.
Supp. 1314, 1332 (D. Mass. 1994) (finding
that music used to cultivate trade show
attendees'' interest provided direct financial
benefit to trade show).
Napster, Inc.''s cursory discussion of the
second element of vicarious liability does
little to rebut this line of reasoning. Relying
on Religious Technology Center, 907 F.
Supp. at 1376-77, defendant maintains that it
does not have a policy of ignoring
infringement, and that even if it did, its non-infringing uses lure consumers to its service.
The latter contention, for which it provides
no factual support, does not square with its
prediction that "the requested injunction
would effectively put Napster out of
business." Def.''s Opp. Br. at 31. If many of
defendant''s commercially significant uses
were non-infringing, an injunction limited to
unlawful activity would not have such a dire
impact. Defendant''s representations about
the primacy of its legitimate uses thus appear
disingenuous. The ability to download
myriad popular music files without payment
seems to constitute the glittering object that
attracts Napster''s financially-valuable user
base.
4. Plaintiffs has shown a reasonable
likelihood of success on their vicarious
infringement claims.
F. Defendant''s First Amendment
Challenge
1. According to Napster, Inc., the requested
injunction would impose a prior restraint on
its free speech, as well as that of its users and
the unsigned artists that depend upon its
service. This First Amendment argument
centers on the fact that defendant offers an
electronic directory, which does not itself
contain copyrighted material. Directories
have been accorded First Amendment
protection. See Princeton Community Phone
Book, Inc. v. Bate, 582 F.2d 706, 710-11
(3d Cir.) (holding that First Amendment
affords as much protection to listing in
directory as it does to newspaper
advertisement), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 966
(1978).
2. Although an overbroad injunction might
implicate the First Amendment, free speech
concerns "are protected by and coextensive
with the fair use doctrine." Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. v. Comline Bus. Data, Inc.,
166 F.3d 65, 74 (2d Cir. 1999); Religious
Tech. Ctr., 907 F. Supp. at 1377 (stating
that, where otherwise appropriate, imposing
liability for copyright infringement does not
necessarily create First Amendment concerns
because the fair use defense encompasses
this issue). This court has already determined
that plaintiffs do not seek to enjoin any fair
uses of the Napster service that are not
completely contrived or peripheral to its
existence.
3. The parties dispute the extent to which
infringing and non-infringing aspects of the
service are separable. Napster, Inc.''s interim
CEO Hank Barry and Vice President of
Engineering Edward Kessler both opine that
the requested injunction would have the
practical effect of compelling defendant to
exclude all songs from its system, including
those which plaintiffs do not own. See Barry
Dec. ¶¶ 13; Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 39. In this view,
the injunction would destroy the Napster
service, or if the service did not shut down
completely, forcibly supplant peer-to-peer
file-sharing with a model under which
defendant dictated the content. See Kessler
Dec. ¶¶ 39. Barry avers that, as a result of
the injunction, Napster would lose its
competitive edge vis-a-vis similar services.
See Barry Dec. ¶¶ 13.
In contrast, plaintiffs contend that Napster''s
New Artist Program, message boards, chat
rooms, and file-sharing applications for
business and scientific research would remain
viable if the court granted the requested
relief. See Pl.''s Reply at 19; Daniel Farmer
Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 3-4. Plaintiffs expert Daniel
Farmer suggests several potentially viable
methods of limiting the Napster service to
music files authorized for sharing. First,
defendant could compile a database of
authorized music and then write a software
program to read the files on users'' hard
drives when they log-on to the Napster
service. The program would compare those
file names with the authorized list, and only
those files that matched could be uploaded
onto Napster. See Farmer Dec. ¶¶ 3.
Alternatively, defendant could write a
software program that prevented users from
successfully searching for file names
excluded from the authorized list. See id.
In the event that Napster, Inc. cannot
separate the infringing and non-infringing
aspects of its service, its First Amendment
argument still fails. Courts will not sustain a
First Amendment challenge where the
defendant entraps itself in an "all-or-nothing
predicament." Dr. Seuss Enters., L.P. v.
Penguin Books USA, Inc., 109 F.3d 1394,
1406 (9th Cir.) (enjoining entire book that
included parody in style of Dr. Seuss poem
because defendant proceeded with book
production after onset of litigation), cert.
dismissed, 118 S. Ct. 27 (1997). Even if it is
technologically impossible for Napster, Inc.
to offer such functions as its directory
without facilitating infringement, the court
still must take action to protect plaintiffs''
copyrights. See, e.g., Orth-O-Vision, Inc. v.
Home Box Office, 474 F. Supp. 672, 686
n.14 (S.D.N.Y. 1979).
G. Misuse of Copyright Defense
1. Defendant essentially raises an antitrust
argument as an equitable defense against the
preliminary injunction motion. Under the
rubric of misuse of copyright, Napster, Inc.
argues that plaintiffs seek to aggrandize their
monopoly beyond the scope of their
copyrights by (1) restricting the flow of
unsigned artists'' music, which competes
with their own, and (2) controlling the
distribution of music over the Internet.
Alleged antitrust violations by a copyright
plaintiff generally do not afford a valid
defense against an infringement action and
ought not to dissuade a court from granting
injunctive relief. See 4 Nimmer on Copyright
§§ 13.09[A], at 13-286 (citing, inter alia, Orth-O-Vision, 474 F. Supp. at 689).
2. Furthermore, most of the cases defendant
cites deal with improper attempts to enlarge
a copyright monopoly through restricted or
exclusive licensing. See, e.g., Practice
Management Info. Corp. v. American Med. Ass''n, 121 F.3d 516, 521 (9th Cir.) (1997),
as amended 133 F.3d 1140 (9th Cir. 1998)
(finding licensing agreement precluding use
of competitor''s products to be misuse), and
cert. denied 522 U.S. 933 (1997); see also,
e.g., Alcatel USA, Inc. v. DGI Tech., Inc.,
166 F.3d 772, 792-95 (overturning district
court''s rejection of misuse defense based on
licensing agreement allowing plaintiff to gain
control over uncopyrighted products), reh''g
and reh''g en banc denied, 180 F.3d 267 (5th
Cir. 1999); Lasercomb Am., Inc. v.
Reynolds, 911 F.2d 970, 978-79 (4th Cir.
1990) (concluding that exclusive licensing
clause inhibiting licensees from developing
own products constituted misuse). Plaintiffs
have granted no licenses to defendant, let
alone impermissibly restrictive ones. See
Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 4; Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ 5;
Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 21; Kenswil Dec. ¶¶ 15;
Vidich Dec. ¶¶ 8; Stoller Dec. ¶¶ 11.
3. Accordingly, this court rejects the misuse
of copyright defense.
H. Waiver
1. Napster, Inc. also avers that plaintiffs
waived their entitlement to copyright
protection because (a) they hastened the
proliferation of MP3 files on the Internet,
and (b) they plan to enter the market for
digital downloading themselves. These
arguments are unavailing.
Defendant has submitted deposition excerpts
related to the record company plaintiffs''
business dealings with Internet and software
companies that provide ripping software,
custom CDs,26 and players capable of playing
unencrypted MP3 files.27 See, e.g., 1
Pulgram Dec., Exh. A (Conroy Dep.) at
51:8-52:16, Exh. B (Cottrell Dep.) at
141:10-142:142. None of plaintiffs'' online
partners is a party to this action. But at least
one plaintiff----Sony----sells a device
capable of playing downloaded MP3 files,
regardless of whether the distribution of such
files is authorized. See id., Exh. E (Eisenberg
Dep.) at 44:5-48:10, Exh. 220.
This limited evidence fails to convince the
court that the record companies created the
monster that is now devouring their
intellectual property rights.28 Although
plaintiffs have not sued their business
partners for contributory infringement, they
typically have asked them to discourage
unauthorized ripping and have made security
part of their agreements. See, e.g., Exh. A
(Conroy Dep.) at 17:13-23, 18:22-19:6,
38:3-22, 51:8-14; Exh. B (Cottrell Dep.) at
135:24-136:7. Defendant fails to show that,
in hastening the proliferation of MP3 files,
plaintiffs did more than seek partners for
their commercial downloading ventures and
develop music players for files they planned
to sell over the Internet. 29 Nor did plaintiffs
invite wholesale infringement when they
distributed a small number of free MP3 files
for promotional purposes, especially since
many of these files automatically "timed-out." See Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 9-17; Cottrell Dec.
¶¶ 15; Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ 13; Kenswil Dec.
¶¶ 12; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7(d), 8.
To support its waiver argument, defendant
primarily cites inapposite cases involving
implied licenses. See, e.g., Effects Assocs.,
Inc. v. Cohen, 908 F.2d 555, 559-60 (9th
Cir. 1990) (finding implied license where
plaintiff created work at defendant''s request
and gave work to defendant with intent that
defendant copy and distribute it), cert.
denied, 498 U.S. 1103 (1991). The evidence
here does not reveal the existence of an
implied license; indeed, the RIAA gave
defendant express notice that it objected to
the availability of its members'' copyrighted
music on Napster. See Creighton 12/3/99
Dec., Exh. D.
I. Failure to Present Evidence of
Copyright Registration
1. Defendant argues that, to claim
infringement of multiple works, plaintiffs
must specify the works with particularity and
provide proof of copyright registration. The
cited statutory subsection, 17 U.S.C. section
411(a), provides with certain exceptions: "[N]o action for infringement of the
copyright in any work shall be instituted until
registration of the copyright claim has been
made in accordance with this title." 17 U.S.C. §§ 411(a); see also Kodadek v. MTV
Networks, Inc., 152 F.3d 1209, 1211 (9th
Cir. 1998). A copyright infringement claim
consists of two elements: (a) ownership of a
valid copyright, and (b) copying of original
elements of the copyrighted work. See Feist
Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Serv.
Co., 499 U.S. 340, 361 (1991).
2. Napster, Inc. exaggerates the import of a
non-governing case, Cole v. Allen, 3 F.R.D.
236, 237 (S.D.N.Y. 1942). In Cole, the
defendant allegedly copied episodes from six
books. Cole failed to plead her infringement
claim with sufficient particularity because she
merely listed the books'' titles without
specifying which portions were copied. Here,
plaintiffs have attached two schedules listing
works allegedly infringed in their entirety.
Schedule A includes proof of registration;
Schedule B (works recorded before 1972)
does not because this material is governed by
state law. Thus, despite their claim that it
would be burdensome or even impossible to
identify all of the copyrighted music they
own, plaintiffs have made at least a minimal
effort to describe the works in suit.
3. Furthermore, in Walt Disney Co. v.
Powell, 897 F.2d 565, 568 (D.C. Cir. 1990),
the D.C. Circuit allowed a permanent
injunction covering works owned by the
plaintiff but not in suit. The Walt Disney
court found such a broad injunction
appropriate where "liability has been
determined adversely to the infringer, there
has been a history of continuing infringement
and a significant threat of future infringement
remains." Id. Here, the evidence establishes
that unauthorized sharing of plaintiffs''
copyrighted music occurred on a massive
scale in the past; Napster continues to be
used to download and upload files illegally
despite defendant''s purportedly enhanced
ability to terminate infringers; and the court
anticipates a hemorrhage of plaintiffs''
copyrighted material as users rush to obtain
free music before trial. The courts therefore
finds it necessary to issue an injunction
covering both plaintiffs'' copyrighted works
in suit and those not yet named.
J. Irreparable Harm
1. Because plaintiffs have shown a
reasonable likelihood of success on the
merits of their contributory and vicarious
copyright infringement claims, they are
entitled to a presumption of irreparable
harm. See Micro Star,154 F.3d at 1109.
2. The court rejects defendant''s contention
that it has rebutted this presumption by
demonstrating that any harm is de minimis.
The declarations of record company
executives, combined with the Teece Report,
establish that plaintiffs have invested in the
digital downloading market and that their
business plans are threatened by a service
that offers the same product for free. See
Conroy Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 9-18; Cottrell Dec. ¶¶ ¶¶
6-17; Eisenberg Dec. ¶¶ ¶¶ 9-22; Teece Rep.
at 14-18 ; Vidich Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 7-10. Moreover,
while the court recognizes the limitations of
a survey that only targets college students,
the Jay Report suggests the tendency of
Napster use to suppress CD purchases,
especially among heavy users. See Jay Rep.
at 4, 18.
K. Balance of the Hardships
1. The court cannot give much weight to
defendant''s lament that the requested relief
will put it out of business. See Sun
Microsystems, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 188
F.3d 1115, 1119 (9th Cir. 1999). Although
even a narrow injunction may so fully
eviscerate Napster, Inc. as to destroy its user
base30 or make its service technologically
infeasible, the business interests of an
infringer do not trump a rights holder''s
entitlement to copyright protection. Nor
does defendant''s supposed inability to
separate infringing and non-infringing
elements of its service constitute a valid
reason for denying plaintiffs relief or for
issuing a stay. See Dr. Seuss, 109 F.3d at
1406.
Any destruction of Napster, Inc. by a
preliminary injunction is speculative
compared to the statistical evidence of
massive, unauthorized downloading and
uploading of plaintiffs'' copyrighted
works----as many as 10,000 files per
second, by defendant''s own admission. See
Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 29. The court has every
reason to believe that, without a preliminary
injunction, these numbers will mushroom as
Napster users, and newcomers attracted by
the publicity, scramble to obtain as much free
music as possible before trial.
2. Napster, Inc. contends that its service
poses no harm to plaintiffs because future
SDMI specifications will protect their music
releases in both CD and downloadable
formats.31 Defendant purportedly intends to
support SDMI-compliant formats when they
become available. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 37.
However, this argument suffers from two
fatal flaws. First, assuming SDMI
protections work, they will only affect
plaintiffs'' new releases; neither the
copyrighted material in Schedules A and B
of the complaint nor any other existing music
that plaintiffs own will be covered. See 1
Pulgram Dec. (Vidich Dep.) at 54:6-55:4,
59:8-62:10. Second, because the SDMI
specifications have not yet taken effect, they
cannot shield plaintiffs from irreparable harm
at this moment----the moment in which the
preliminary injunction is sought. See id. at
59:8-62:10. A rights-friendly regime
scheduled for implementation, at the earliest,
by the end of 2000 does nothing to staunch
the illegal flow of plaintiffs'' copyrighted
material over the Internet in the summer and
autumn of this year.
3. Thus, even if the court were required to
balance the hardships, which it is not because
plaintiffs have raised serious questions and
shown a strong likelihood of success on the
merits, plaintiffs would prevail in their
motion for a preliminary injunction.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court
GRANTS plaintiffs'' motion for a
preliminary injunction against Napster, Inc.
Defendant is hereby preliminarily
ENJOINED from engaging in, or facilitating
others in copying, downloading, uploading,
transmitting, or distributing plaintiffs''
copyrighted musical compositions and sound
recordings, protected by either federal or
state law, without express permission of the
rights owner. This injunction applies to all
such works that plaintiffs own; it is not
limited to those listed in Schedules A and B
of the complaint.
Plaintiffs have shown persuasively that they
own the copyrights to more than seventy
percent of the music available on the Napster
system. See Hausman Dec. ¶¶ 8. Because
defendant has contributed to illegal copying
on a scale that is without precedent, it bears
the burden of developing a means to comply
with the injunction. Defendant must insure
that no work owned by plaintiffs which
neither defendant nor Napster users have
permission to use or distribute is uploaded or
downloaded on Napster. The court
ORDERS plaintiffs to cooperate with
defendant in identifying the works to which
they own copyrights. To this end, plaintiffs
must file a written plan no later than
September 5, 2000, describing the most
expedient method by which their rights can
be ascertained. The court also ORDERS
plaintiffs to post a bond for the sum of $
5,000,000.00 to compensate defendant for
its losses in the event that this injunction is
reversed or vacated.32
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated:
MARILYN HALL PATEL
Chief Judge, United States District Court
ENDNOTES
1. Hereafter, the court will use the term
"music" to encompass both musical
compositions and sound recordings, unless
otherwise specifically noted.
2. For the sake of clarity, the court will refer
to the defendant Internet company as "Napster, Inc." The term "Napster" will be
used to denote Napster, Inc.''s integrated
service, including but not limited to its
software, servers, search functions, and
indexing functions. Where "Napster" appears
as an adjective, the aspect of the service to
which the adjective refers should be clear from
the context. The term "Napster user" refers to
any individual who uses Napster software to
download and/or upload files.
3. Although the parties sporadically include
Eileen Richardson as a defendant in the
caption, the court notes that she was
dismissed from this action pursuant to the
May 24, 2000 stipulation of dismissal.
4. In this Memorandum and Order, the court
will cite to and quote from any declaration,
deposition, or other material filed under
protective order if the parties relied upon it, or
it is necessary to explain the court''s findings
and conclusions. Documents unsealed on this
ground include: Russell Frackman Declaration
(vols. 1 & 2), Kevin Conroy Declaration,
Richard Cottrell Declaration, Mark Eisenberg
Declaration, Lawrence Kenswil Declaration,
Paul Vidich Declaration, David J. Teece
Declaration, Edward Kessler Declaration,
Laurence F. Pulgram Declaration (vols. 1 &
2), Daniel Farmer Declaration, Russell
Frackman Reply Declaration, Julia Greer
Reply Declaration, and David Lambert Reply
Declaration. This list includes any, or all,
supporting exhibits that may contain internal
company plans, deposition transcripts, or other
material upon which the court has relied. Any
other document formerly covered by
protective order but cited in this Memorandum
and Order is also deemed to be unsealed.
5. Defendant objects to this exhibit to former
CEO Eileen Richardson''s deposition on the
grounds that it is neither properly
authenticated nor "relevant to Napster work
today." Def.''s Objections to Pl.''s Evidence
at 10. The court does not intend to rule
directly on each of defendant''s myriad
objections, many of which are unfounded;
however, it notes that Richardson testified
that she reviewed this document and that it
dated from October 1999. She confirmed
much of its content under oath, and
defendant''s counsel failed to object to the
document during the deposition on
relevancy, foundational, or authentication
grounds. Defendant''s early business plans
are relevant to this action because they
reveal facts about the early operation of the
Napster service, as well as the knowledge
and goals of Napster, Inc. executives.
Accordingly, Exhibit 127 to the Richardson
Deposition is admissible.
6. Plaintiffs'' expert Dr. Ingram Olkin, a
professor of statistics at Stanford University,
divided his study into two projects. In the User
Project, a sample list of users and file names
was taken every hour for four days.
Researchers culled a random sub-sample of
1,150 users from 28,000 sampled and
determined that all 1,150 users offered to
share at least two copyrighted songs. See id. at
4-5, 7. The Download Project performed
downloads at eight separate times for a five-minute period and generated a list of 1,150
songs from a population of approximately 574,
185 files. See id. at 6. Olkin found that
plaintiffs or other copyright holders own or
administer the rights to 1,002 (or 87.1 percent)
of the 1,150 files. Thirty-seven (or 3.2
percent) of the files are likely to copyrighted
and distributed without authorization. Dr.
Olkin identified only three files (or .26
percent) which were clearly offered without
objection from the rights holder, while 108 (or
9.4 percent) of the files did not present enough
data to yield a conclusion. See id. at 7. Charles
J. Hausman, anti-piracy counsel for the RIAA,
determined that 834 out of 1,150 files in
Olkin''s download database belonged to or
were administered by plaintiffs and were
exchanged on Napster without permission. See
Charles J. Hausman Dec. ¶¶ 8.
7. Defendant''s objection to Exhibit 254 of the
Parker Deposition exemplifies a strategy, in
which both parties have engaged, of
indiscriminately challenging unfavorable
evidence. This approach is both fruitless and
burdensome for the court. Defendant
characterizes Exhibit 254 as irrelevant to how
the company "actually operates;" yet the early
business strategies of Napster, Inc. are plainly
relevant to such issues as defendant''s
knowledge of the infringing activity and its
intended effect on the market.
While defendant raises many meritless
objections, it also correctly notes that plaintiffs
failed to authenticate some of the documents
upon which they rely. For example, plaintiffs
did not get Shawn Fanning to authenticate
Exhibits 186 and 188 to his deposition. They
have paid a price for this oversight. The court
cannot rely on documents that would
otherwise be "smoking guns" indicating that Napster, Inc. sought to "bypass the record
industry entirely," make record stores
obsolete, and "bring[] about the death of the
CD." 1 Frackman Dec. (Fanning Dep.), Exh.
186 at 00017; Exh. 188.
8. Sean Parker appears to have mistakenly
identified this document, numbered
NAP003687----an October 28, 1999 email
from Stephanie Norton to other Napster
employees, including Parker----as Exhibit A
to his declaration. In fact, it is Exhibit B.
Although the email indicates that defendant
planned to solicit interest among unsigned
artists, it contains a cryptic statement
regarding the creation of indexes listing
available MP3s: "For now, we should do this
for UNSIGNED artists only so the RIAA thinks we are not infringing on copyright."
Parker Dec., Exh. B (second emphasis added).
As is often the case with defendant''s internal
documents, whether defendant viewed the
promotion of new artists as a genuine goal or
a smokescreen remains ambiguous.
9. See infra at section (C)(12) of the
Findings of Fact for a description of the two
aspects of defendant''s New Artist
Program----a website version and a
software-based version.
10. Defendant also provides an audio player
capable of playing MP3 files on a user''s hard
drive, regardless of how those files were
obtained. See Edward Kessler Reply Dec. in
Support of Def.''s Mot. for Summ. Adjud. ¶¶
29. Neither party has briefed the function of
the audio player in support of its position on
the necessity of a preliminary injunction.
However, the player has little or no connection
to the alleged copying that occurs when
Napster users upload or download music and,
hence, is not relevant to the requested relief.
See id. While a consumer might rip CDs and
then play the resultant MP3 files on the
Napster player, the court rejects any
suggestion that this activity constitutes a
substantial, non-infringing use of Napster for
the same reasons it dismisses defendant''
argument about space-shifting from home to
office. The court also notes that, because the
audio player can only play music files which a
user already possesses, it cannot be used for
sampling.
11. BMG''s labels include plaintiffs Arista
Records, LaFace Records, and RCA
Records. See Conroy Dec. ¶¶ 1. BMG Music
is also a plaintiff in this action.
12. If such music is not protected
technologically, an individual consumer may
become a worldwide distributor of copyrighted
material after obtaining a single, promotional
copy in digital format. See Teece Rep. at 13.
13. Fine''s study tracked retail music sales
trends in three types of stores in the United
States: (1) all stores located within one mile of
any college or university on a list acquired
from Quality Education Data; (2) all stores
located within one mile of any college or
university on a list of colleges and universities
that have banned Napster use; (3) all stores
within one mile of any college or university
listed among the "Top 40 Most Wired
Colleges in 1999," according to Yahoo
Internet Life. Researchers working on the Fine
Report used Soundscan Point of Sale data to
compare music sales totals from the latter two
categories with (1) national totals and (2) sales
from the first category, "All College Stores."
The report tracked retail sales in the first
quarter ("Q1") of 1997, 1998, 1999, and 2000.
See Fine Rep. at 2-4.
14. Fine''s conclusions were not limited to
Napster, but rather assessed the effects of
online music file-sharing in general. See id.
While national sales grew "significantly and
consistently" in the quarters Fine studied, sales
at stores near colleges or universities declined,
with sales in the "Top 40 Most Wired
Colleges" and "Napster-banned" subsets
showing an even sharper decline than those in
the "All College Stores" category. See id.
The court has noted the limitations of the Jay
and Fine Reports in its separate order
regarding the admissibility of expert
opinions. Despite flaws in each report, the
court relies on Jay''s insights into the music
purchasing and downloading habits of
college students, as opposed to all Napster
users, and considers the Fine Report relevant
to corroborate Jay''s findings.
15. The court''s memorandum and order
regarding the admissibility of expert reports
includes a detailed discussion of flaws in the
Fader Report. Among the shortcomings the
court noted are Fader''s heavy reliance on
journalistic articles and studies that he did not
conduct, the fact the centerpiece of his report
is a survey that he only distantly supervised,
and the lack of tables offering statistical
breakdowns of survey respondents and their
answers.
16. The availability of free MP3 music files
elsewhere in cyberspace means that enjoining
Napster fails to provide a complete panacea
for plaintiffs'' problems. However, arguing
that third-parties also facilitate unlawful
activity does not constitute valid defense to
claims of contributory and vicarious copyright
infringement.
17. Defendant cites Cadence Design Systems,
Inc. v. Avant! Corp., 125 F.3d 824, 829 (9th
Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1118
(1998), for the proposition that showing a
plaintiff has suffered no injury, or de minimis
injury, rebuts the presumption of irreparable
harm. Such language in Cadence constitutes
pure dicta. Moreover, the passage from
Nimmer on Copyright to which the Cadence
court refers deals with defeating an allegation
of substantial similarity by demonstrating that
the amount of copying was de minimis.
Defendant does not suggest that downloading
entire copyrighted songs is de minimis
copying, but rather that obtaining music using
Napster does not displace CD sales. See Def''s Opp. at 29.
18. Defendant cites the Office of Technology
Assessment ("OTA") report on home taping to
bolster its misguided argument about the
Audio Home Recording Act of 1992. See infra
note 19. Plaintiffs note that the OTA Report
expressly contemplates use by "a household
and its normal circle of friends, rather than the
public." Pl.''s Reply at 4 (citing U.S. Cong.,
OTA, Copyright and Home Copying:
Technology Challenges the Law). Although
this definition of home use does not control, it
nevertheless suggests flaws in defendant''s
position.
19. Defendant''s opposition brief opens with
a perplexing argument. It cites Recording
Industry Association of America v. Diamond
Multimedia Systems, Inc., 180 F.3d 1072,
1079 (9th Cir. 1999), for the proposition that
the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992, 17 U.S.C. sections 1001-1010 ("AHRA"),
immunizes the noncommercial use of
Napster to space-shift music. The AHRA is
irrelevant to the instant action. Neither the
record company nor music publisher
plaintiffs have brought claims under the AHRA; moreover, the Ninth Circuit did not
hold in Diamond Multimedia that the AHRA
covers the downloading of MP3 files.
Diamond Multimedia involved a suit under
the AHRA by the Recording Industry
Association of America ("RIAA") to enjoin
the manufacture and distribution of the Rio
portable music player----a hand-held device
that can receive, store, and re-play MP3 files.
See Diamond Multimedia, 180 F.3d at 1074.
The Ninth Circuit held that the Rio player is
not a digital audio recording device subject
to the AHRA''s restrictions. See id. at 1081.
Nor are computers and their hard drives
digital audio recording devices. See id. at
1078. The Diamond Multimedia court did
opine that making copies with the Rio to
space-shift, or make portable, files already
on a user''s hard drive constitutes
"paradigmatic noncommercial personal use
entirely consistent with the purposes of the
Act [i.e. the facilitation of personal use]." Id.
at 1079. However, this dicta is of limited
relevance. Because plaintiffs have not made
AHRA claims, the purposes and legislative
history of the AHRA do not govern the
appropriateness of a preliminary injunction
against Napster, Inc. Furthermore, as
explained below, the court is not persuaded
that space-shifting constitutes a substantial,
non-infringing use of the Napster service.
The Ninth Circuit did not discuss the fair use
doctrine in Diamond Multimedia.
This court denies defendant''s request for
judicial notice of the legislative history of the AHRA, filings in Diamond Multimedia, and
certain other materials deemed irrelevant or
inappropriate for judicial notice.
20. Relying on Vault Corp. v. Quaid Software,
Ltd, 847 F.2d 255 (5th Cir. 1988), defendant
argues that even one substantial non-infringing
use precludes contributory liability. RAMKEY, one feature of Quaid''s computer
diskette, had an unobjectionable use because
consumers could use it to make archival copies
of Vault''s anti-piracy software if Vault''s
program were inadvertently destroyed. Based
on this one use, the Fifth Circuit held that
there was no contributory copyright
infringement, even though third partiesdid
engage in direct infringement. See id. at 262.
Other jurisdictions have disagreed with the
Vault approach where the product''s primary
purpose is unlawful. See Cable/Home
Communication Corp. 902 F.2d at 846;
General Audio Video, 948 F. Supp. at 1456. A
Fifth Circuit opinion does not bind this court.
Moreover, even the Fifth Circuit declined to
consider the legitimate functions of Copywrite,
another feature of Quaid''s product, because
"without RAMKEY, Copywrite would have
no commercial value." Vault, 847 F.2d at 264
n.16. The Napster service arguably has little
commercial value without the availability of
copyrighted popular music.
21. For example, defendant notes that its
technology might be used for collaborative
working relationships in business, education,
and research. See Def''s Opp. at 9 n.10.
22. MP3 files do not bear a copyright notice or
watermark. See Lisi Dec. (Tygar Rep.) at 37-47. More than one artist may use a song title;
and multiple recordings of the same work may
carry different authorizations. See id. at 29.
23. Defendant objects to Exhibit M to the
Frackman Declaration because press articles
constitute hearsay and statements reported
within them are double hearsay. See Def.''s
Objections to Pl.''s Evidence at 12. However,
defendant does not appear to dispute the truth
of the matter asserted----that Napster, Inc.
sued The Offspring for violating its intellectual
property rights. Indeed, defendant''s second
ground for objecting indicates that it admits
such a lawsuit was filed. See id. If the exhibit
should be excluded because the suit involved
trademark, rather than copyright, defendant
effectively concedes that it brought a
trademark action.
24. This finding also puts an end to
defendant''s persistent attempts to invoke the
protection of the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act, 17 U.S.C. section 512. In its opposition
brief, Napster, Inc. attempts to persuade the
court that subsection 512(d) provides an
applicable safe harbor. However, this
subsection expressly excludes from protection
any defendant who has "[a]ctual knowledge
that the material or activity is infringing," §§
512)(d)(1)(A), or "is aware of facts or
circumstances from which infringing activity is
apparent." §§ 512(d)(1)(B). Defendant has
failed to persuade this court that subsection
512(d) shelters contributory infringers.
25. Although defendant appears to object to
Exhibit 251 to the Parker Deposition, it does
not assert any grounds for doing so. See
Def.''s Objections to Pl.''s Evidence at 11.
The court declines to speculate about
defendant''s reasons for objecting. Exhibit 251
is deemed admissible due to defendant''s
failure to make a proper objection.
26. Custom CDs can be created using a CD
burner, a device that allows consumers to
convert MP3 files from a computer hard
drive to CD format. See, e.g., 1 Pulgram
Dec., Exh. A (Conroy Dep.) at 14:10-17.
27. Player software enables consumers to play
MP3 files. Such software is available on the
Internet, possibly free of charge, and may be
part of the bundled software sold by PC
manufacturers. See, e.g., 1 Pulgram Dec., Exh.
A (Conroy Dep.) at 14:21-17:12.
28. For example, such plaintiffs as BMG and
Sony have entered into agreements with Listen.com, a site that provides links to CD-ripping applications. See
Exh. A (Conroy
Dep.) at 49:22-51:20, Exh. 295; Exh. E
(Eisenberg Dep.) at 135:2-24. However,
BMG representative Kevin Conroy stated in
his deposition that BMG encourages its
online partners "to provide only for
authorized ripping" and that BMG has
agreements with such sites "to legitimately
and securely market, promote, and sell
[BMG] artists'' music." Id. at 43:20-24,
51:8-14.
In the case of Musicmaker.com, in which
EMI owns an equity stake, consumers can purchase single tracks and have them burned
into a custom CD. See id., Exh. B (Cottrell
Dep.) at 141:10-142:17. It is not clear that
Musicmaker.com promotes the use of
pirated music. Similarly, Universal has
entered agreements related to commercial
downloading with Real Jukebox, which the
first phase of the Secure Digital Music
Initiative ("SDMI") did not cover. See id., Exh. F (Kenswil Dep.) at 54:8-56:25; see
also infra note 31 (discussing SDMI
specifications). Under its agreement with
Universal, RealJukebox will become SDMI-compliant, but still will be able to play
unencrypted files to the extent the SDMI-specifications allow. Defendant provides no
conclusive evidence that Universal has
encouraged the use of Real Jukebox to play
copyrighted music for which no
authorization has been obtained.
Finally, Sony VAIO Music Clip appears to be
a Sony product that facilitates the
downloading, arrangement, storage, and
playback of MP3, ATRAC3, or WAV files.
However, while the VAIO Music Clip may not
be able to screen out unauthorized files, one
advertisement promotes the "secure music
download capability of the software" and
indicates that consumers should "purchase the
wave of titles for major artists and record
labels that are soon to come" on music
websites. See id., Exh. E (Eisenberg Dep.) at
44:5-48:10, Exh. 220 (emphasis added).
29. An internal Universal document that
mentions "superdistribution" constitutes the
most compelling evidence of defendant''s
position. See id., Exh. F (Kenswil Dep), Exh.
257 at U0866. "Superdistribution" means viral
distribution through a chain of consumers and
their friends. See id. at 45:1-4,19-25.
However, in his deposition, Lawrence Kenswil
indicated that Universal envisioned a model of
viral distribution in which consumers would
pay for the product and permission of the
rights holder would be obtained prior to
transmission. See id. at 45:5-46:7. That such a
system eventually might encompass some
version of Napster does not demonstrate a
waiver of plaintiffs'' copyrights.
According to another internal Universal plan,
the "[g]oal is not just to equal Napster et al,
but to surpass them." Id., Exh. 258 at U0840.
Defendant argues that Universal intended to
commandeer Napster for its own benefit. Yet
the strategic plan repeatedly employs the word
"secure"----emphasizing its "secure . . . core
technology" and referring to the "perceived
attractiveness of secure content by users" as a
barometer of success. Id. (emphasis added).
Nowhere does this document state or imply
that Universal planned to promote unrestricted
downloading of its music for free.
30. Because the Napster service appears to
enjoy a cult following, the court doubts that a
preliminary injunction would destroy
defendant''s user base. If users switch to other
services like Gnutella while Napster is
temporarily enjoined, there is a reasonable
likelihood that they will switch back, especially
considering defendant''s claim to offer more
music and more efficient search tools than its
competitors.
31. The Secure Digital Music Initiative, "SDMI," is a forum that brings together
interested parties to develop technology
specifications for protecting the distribution of
digital media. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 36. Some
time in the future, but no earlier than the end
of the year 2000, SDMI will select certain
specifications for content media, such as CDs
and digital file formats. See 1 Pulgram Dec., Exh. N (Vidich Dep.) at 59:8-62:10. The first
phase of SDMI covered portable physical
devices, but still allowed these devices to play
unencrypted files. See 1 Pulgram Dec., Exh. F (Kenswil Dep.) at 54:8-54:19.
Generally speaking, the next phase of SDMI
will concern two forms of digital rights
management technology: encryption and
watermarking. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶¶¶ 35, 36;
1 Pulgram Dec., Exh. N (Vidich Dep.) at
59:8-62:10. Encryption codes files in a way
that requires "keys," such as the consumer''s
hardware serial numbers, to access the files''
content. See Kessler Dec. ¶¶ 36; 1 Pulgram
Dec., Exh. N (Vidich Dep.) at 53:10-56:8.
Encryption technology has limitations,
however. For example, encrypted CDs will
not function in existing CD players because
the players will not be able to read them. See
1 Pulgram Dec., Exh. N (Vidich Dep.) at
52:21-53:2. Thus, consumers will have to
purchase new CD players to listen to
encrypted CD music. See id. at 53:22-54:4.
Also, encryption technology will provide
only prospective protection because it will
not affect existing discs. See id. 54:6-55:4.
Watermarking imbeds "bits" or inaudible
marks on content media; future SDMI-compliant devices or software players will be
able to read the presence or absence of those
bits and control copying accordingly. See
Pulgram Dec., Exh. N (Vidich Dep.) at 57:2-9; 59:8-62:10. One form of copy control will
allow consumers to copy CDs onto their SDMI-compliant devices, but will prevent
further copying or transmission over the
Internet. See id. at 60:14-25; 61:11-62:10; Exh. 227 at TW 0556742. Some time in the
future, but not before year''s end, several
record company plaintiffs intend to
implement watermarking technology that
complies with SDMI specifications. See,
e.g., Pulgram Dec., Exh . N (Vidich Dep.) at
59:8-62:10); Exh. B (Cottrell Dep.) at
99:24-101:4 (EMI)). However,
watermarking technology also has
limitations. For instance, the first phase of SDMI-compliant devices and popular digital
music software like the Real Jukebox can
play formats that do not contain
watermarking. See Pulgram Dec., Exh . N (Vidich Dep. at 59:8-60:25), Exh. F (Kenswil Dep.) at 54:8-56:19. Finally, like
encryption, watermarking only offers
prospective copy protection; it will not affect
existing media because (a) such media
cannot be "queried" to determine if the copy
is legitimate, and (b) only future SDMI-compliant players will be able to make that
query. See 1 Pulgram Dec., Exh. N (Vidich
Dep.) at 59:8-62:10. 32. On July 26, 2000, the court ordered
defendant to comply with the preliminary
injunction by midnight on July 28, 2000;
however, on July 28, a Ninth Circuit panel
stayed the injunction. That same day, plaintiffs
posted their bond. |