Deeplinks 09月29日 10:49
九 Circuit 维持 DMCA 限制
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第九巡回上诉法院维持了针对 Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) 512(h) 传票的一项重要限制,该限制保护了互联网服务提供商 (ISP) 不受此类传票的影响。DMCA 是一项旨在帮助版权持有者打击在线侵权的反盗版法律,但其中的 512(h) 条款允许版权持有者在不需法官批准的情况下获取匿名侵权者的身份信息。该法院的裁决维护了互联网用户、网站和版权持有者长期以来对 512(h) 条款的理解,并保护了用户免受“版权流氓”的滥用。这一决定确保了重要的程序保障,同时仍然允许版权持有者识别和起诉侵权者。

🔍第九巡回上诉法院的裁决维持了 DMCA 512(h) 传票的一项关键限制,明确指出此类传票不能向符合 § 512(a) 安全港的服务提供商(如 ISP)发出。这一限制基于 DMCA 法案的文本解读,确保了 ISP 的客户隐私得到保护。

🛡️该裁决保护了互联网用户、网站和版权持有者长期以来对 512(h) 条款的理解,防止了未经法官批准即可强制揭示匿名用户身份的情况发生,从而防止了“版权流氓”的滥用。

🚫这一决定维护了重要的程序保障,确保了版权持有者在不损害用户隐私的前提下,仍然能够识别和起诉侵权者。法院的裁决强调了平衡版权保护和用户权利的重要性。

🌐由于多个联邦上诉法院(包括 D.C. 和第八巡回上诉法院)均对此问题作出了相同裁决,ISP 全国范围内可以更加自信地通过拒绝非法的 DMCA 512(h) 传票来保护其客户的隐私。

The Ninth Circuit upheld an important limitation on Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) subpoenas that other federal courts have recognized for more than two decades. The DMCA, a misguided anti-piracy law passed in the late nineties, created a bevy of powerful tools, ostensibly to help copyright holders fight online infringement. Unfortunately, the DMCA’s powerful protections are ripe for abuse by “copyright trolls,” unscrupulous litigants who abuse the system at everyone else’s expense.

The DMCA’s “notice and takedown” regime is one of these tools. Section 512 of the DMCA creates “safe harbors” that protect service providers from liability, so long as they disable access to content when a copyright holder notifies them that the content is infringing, and fulfill some other requirements. This gives copyright holders a quick and easy way to censor allegedly infringing content without going to court. 

Unfortunately, the DMCA’s powerful protections are ripe for abuse by “copyright trolls”

Section 512(h) is ostensibly designed to facilitate this system, by giving rightsholders a fast and easy way of identifying anonymous infringers. Section 512(h) allows copyright holders to obtain a judicial subpoena to unmask the identities of allegedly infringing anonymous internet users, just by asking a court clerk to issue one, and attaching a copy of the infringement notice. In other words, they can wield the court’s power to override an internet user’s right to anonymous speech, without permission from a judge.  It’s easy to see why these subpoenas are prone to misuse.

Internet service providers (ISPs)—the companies that provide an internet connection (e.g. broadband or fiber) to customers—are obvious targets for these subpoenas. Often, copyright holders know the Internet Protocol (IP) address of an alleged infringer, but not their name or contact information. Since ISPs assign IP addresses to customers, they can often identify the customer associated with one.

Fortunately, Section 512(h) has an important limitation that protects users.  Over two decades ago, several federal appeals courts ruled that Section 512(h) subpoenas cannot be issued to ISPs. Now, in In re Internet Subscribers of Cox Communications, LLC, the Ninth Circuit agreed, as EFF urged it to in our amicus brief.

As the Ninth Circuit held:

Because a § 512(a) service provider cannot remove or disable access to infringing content, it cannot receive a valid (c)(3)(A) notification, which is a prerequisite for a § 512(h) subpoena. We therefore conclude from the text of the DMCA that a § 512(h) subpoena cannot issue to a § 512(a) service provider as a matter of law.

This decision preserves the understanding of Section 512(h) that internet users, websites, and copyright holders have shared for decades. As EFF explained to the court in its amicus brief:

[This] ensures important procedural safeguards for internet users against a group of copyright holders who seek to monetize frequent litigation (or threats of litigation) by coercing settlements—copyright trolls. Affirming the district court and upholding the interpretation of the D.C. and Eighth Circuits will preserve this protection, while still allowing rightsholders the ability to find and sue infringers.

EFF applauds this decision. And because three federal appeals courts have all ruled the same way on this question—and none have disagreed—ISPs all over the country can feel confident about protecting their customers’ privacy by simply throwing improper DMCA 512(h) subpoenas in the trash.

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DMCA 版权流氓 互联网服务提供商 隐私保护 第九巡回上诉法院
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