Company successfully defends against trade dress and copyright infringement claims over online software tool
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
1y ago
A federal court in Delaware dismissed most of the intellectual property infringement claims concerning a competing online room-planning software tool. The court held that plaintiff’s trade dress infringement and breach of contract claims failed, and that its copyright infringement claims failed, except for those allegations relating to the copying of computer code. No trade dress protection where look and feel was functional On the trade dress claim, plaintiff had identified fifteen elements that formed a cohesive “look and feel” of its software. And the court found – based on extensive use ..read more
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Company president may be liable for vicarious copyright infringement
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
Plaintiff sued a company and its president for copyright infringement, over some photos that the company published online. The individual defendant moved to dismiss the claim against him, arguing that the complaint (1) did not plead any facts concerning action that he took, (2) did not try to pierce the company’s corporate veil, and (3) contained no facts to establish that the company is the alter ego of the individual defendant. Plaintiff conceded it was neither pursuing an alter-ego theory nor seeking to pierce the corporate veil. Instead, plaintiff argued that the individual defendant was ..read more
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Can you sue a platform for not following DMCA takedown procedures?
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
Plaintiff sued YouTube after the platform took down one of plaintiff’s videos in response to a DMCA takedown notice. She claimed YouTube failed to follow the procedures in 17 U.S.C. §512 by, for example, not providing her with a physical signature of the copyright owner and otherwise not following the “exact course of the DMCA guidelines.” YouTube moved to dismiss and the court granted the motion. It held that §512 serves to provide safe harbor protections from copyright infringement liability to platforms. Section 512 does not,  however, give rise to a standalone basis to sue a platform ..read more
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In copyright infringement case, artist’s social media popularity supported claim that retail chain copied artwork
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
Plaintiff is an artist who designs macabre items, including a bat-themed mug. Defendant (Michaels, the well-known retail craft store) started selling a vase that plaintiff claimed infringed its bat mug copyright. So he sued for copyright infringement. Michaels moved to dismiss, arguing there was no substantial similarity between the works. And even if there were substantial similarity, according to Michaels, plaintiff had not sufficiently alleged that Michaels actually copied the work. The court rejected Michaels’ arguments and denied the motion to dismiss. Actual copying can be shown by indi ..read more
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Copyright ownership transfers must be in writing
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
If you are hiring an independent contractor to create copyrightable subject matter, and you want to own the copyright in the resulting work product, be sure to have that contractor sign a written contract that specifically states that copyright ownership is being transferred. Even if you have paid the contractor for the work, and you both intend that ownership be transferred, the contractor will still own the copyright in the deliverables unless there is a writing, signed by the contractor, to the contrary. This is a key concern if your contractor has created subject matter that will be criti ..read more
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DMCA anticircumvention case over copied YouTube videos moves forward
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
Defendant fired plaintiff over two videos advocating for COVID-19 workplace protections that plaintiff posted on YouTube. Around the time of the termination, the employer allegedly used a smartphone to record the videos in question while they were being played on a computer screen. Defendant then allegedly further copied, distributed and performed these videos in connection with legal proceedings involving plaintiff, without plaintiff’s consent. Plaintiff sued his former employer for copyright infringement. And because YouTube technology provides technological protection measures to prevent u ..read more
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Chicago area retailers sued over iconic David Bowie photo
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
Brian Duffy was an English photographer. He died in 2010 but the Brian Duffy Archive owns and enforces the copyright in his works. Defendants are small retailers around Chicago who developed and sold gift items alleged to appropriate one of Duffy’s well-known David Bowie photos. Who among us hasn’t wished for a Rebel Rebel Pouch or a Ziggy Stardust Koozie? Apparently not the Brian Duffy Archive. It has sued for copyright infringement. Plaintiff first noticed allegedly infringing works on Instagram and then chased down the defendant retailers who do business both online and through brick and m ..read more
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Is it defamation to accuse someone of sending a bogus DMCA takedown notice?
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
Esports aren’t only about 21st century video games. Apparently there is a relatively robust community of Tecmo Bowl enthusiasts who – though the game is three decades old – gets together to compete in tournaments. A couple of members of that community got into it with one another online, and the spat spawned some fierce litigation. That scuffle raised the question of whether accusing someone of sending a bogus DMCA takedown notice is defamatory. The online scuffle Plaintiff was upset about posts defendant made in the forum of a Tecmo Bowl tournament website. One of plaintiff’s claims was that ..read more
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Why get a copyright registration?
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
A work of authorship is protected by copyright at the moment it is created. If you take a photo or write some software or draft some text, copyright law protects that work the moment it becomes fixed in a tangible medium of expression for more than a transitory duration. You do not need a registration to own a copyright. It exists automatically. But there are certain benefits conferred by registering a copyright. Copyright registration allows the holder to sue for infringement. One benefit from having a registration is that the holder of the copyright can sue for infringement. This is a requi ..read more
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What are the legal issues around web scraping?
Chicago internet attorney Evan Brown | Copyright
by Evan Brown
2y ago
Web scraping is that activity where a party uses automated software to crawl the internet and copy data and other content, usually so that it can compile that together and make its own product offering. This may be of concern to you because you are a company that does web scraping. Or you may be a web publisher and there are other parties that are scraping your content. Let’s examine some of the legal issues around web scraping. Breach of contract One of the questions that commonly arises around web scraping is whether the activity is a breach of contract. More specifically, the question is w ..read more
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