The IP world has long been
familiar with the phenomenon of arguably abusive patent litigation by non-practicing
entities (NPEs), known as “patent trolls”. This activity has now extended to the
copyright realm, frustrating both copyright holders and users alike. Similarly
to patent trolling, a monetary settlement reached outside the court is the main
stimulus for such copyright enforcement.
Beware of trolls |
As such, many such settlements are subject to confidentiality
undertakings and hence the scope of such activity is difficult to quantify. That
said, there are distinctive features of copyright trolling. Consider the ongoing
activity driven by a Linux kernel contributor in Germany.
German procedural law
Why there? German preliminary injunction procedure is particularly
designed to prevent infringing activity as soon as possible and its mechanism
is set up to achieve this goal. The injunction proceedings are low cost and
fast. According to this
summary by Hogan Lovells, to file a preliminary injunction action,
the claimant must provide prima facie evidence, which is entirely
based on an affidavit, supporting (i)
its entitlement to the claim; and (ii) urgency of the claim. In most cases, the
court decides on an ex parte basis.
As a result, an injunction in
Germany may be granted even within hours and it becomes immediately enforceable
without suspension during the appeal proceedings. To say the least, such
injunctive procedure can indeed be very favourable to a rightsholder bringing
an infringement claim.
McHardy’s business model
and Geniatech case
Patrick McHardy, a German, is a
former contributor to the Linux Netfilter project,
which is licensed under a General
Public License (GPL). In seeking to enforce his copyright, if
any, McHardy employs the same enforcement method as does the free software community,
e.g. gpl-violations.org, Software Freedom Law Center,
Software Freedom Conservancy,
but his goal is personal monetary gain rather
than licence compliance and software freedom.
McHardy’s strategy is to approach
commercial entities for minor GPL violations, such as attribution deficiencies,
lack or inadequacy of a written offer, or a EULA conflicting with the GPL, for
the sole purpose of obtaining an undertaking to cease and desist (any)
infringing activity, including a clause imposing a contractual penalty per
violation for any future infringement.
McHardy’s demands are modest at
the outset, which makes them an attractive alternative to a lawsuit. However, once
McHardy has secured a contractual remedy available to him, he moves on to allege
another violation by the same entity, claim the penalty and sign a new
agreement with an increased penalty. He comes back to the same companies
multiple times, addressing one violation at a time. Since a cease and desist declaration may likely
contain a non-disclosure requirement, this makes it difficult for defendants to
join forces.
One of the most known is the McHardy
v Geniatech case. The dispute focused on GPL infringements relating to consumer
electronics devices - satellite TV receivers - which included a Netfilter
component. McHardy alleged that Geniatech’s product infringed the GPL (and his
copyright), because no source code (or a written offer thereof) had been
provided within the distributable. Despite defendant’s arguments that McHardy
had no legal standing as required by German copyright law, the Regional Court
of Cologne granted to McHardy, in September 2017, an injunction covering the
entire Linux kernel. In March 2018, the Higher Regional Court of Cologne
reversed this decision (unpublished decision, but a summary is available here).
The court reasoned that McHardy’s
contributions to the Netfilter project did not amount to joint authorship and
the plaintiff did not sufficiently show what exactly his contributions were and
how they constitute a work protected by copyright. The court noted that McHardy
acted in a systematic manner to satisfy his monetary goals; his primary
motivation was not to achieve licence compliance. McHardy was assessed with bearing
all the legal costs for both sides.
Takeaways
The Geniatech case affected
McHardy’s strategy, who continues to be active but tries to stay out of court.
It is believed
that over a five-year period, McHardy has
approached over 80 companies and received
several million euros in payment of "damages".
His primary focus is on consumer products, which are more accessible for
McHardy than, say, B2B offerings, for him to carry out his technical analysis
in search of infringements.
It is easy for one to violate the
terms of the GPL, especially when companies embed third party software into
their products without having full knowledge of what components and licences
are at play. Still, it is important to recognise “profiteers” (here’s
your guide) and not to cooperate with them. A signed cease and desist
declaration subjects companies to non-GPL obligations and penalties and contractual
claims are often much easier to enforce, typically being more straight forward
than the complexity of copyright and GPL compliance issues.
Copyright Trolling: Abusive Litigation Based on a GPL Compliance
Reviewed by Ieva Giedrimaite
on
Sunday, February 24, 2019
Rating:
No comments:
All comments must be moderated by a member of the IPKat team before they appear on the blog. Comments will not be allowed if the contravene the IPKat policy that readers' comments should not be obscene or defamatory; they should not consist of ad hominem attacks on members of the blog team or other comment-posters and they should make a constructive contribution to the discussion of the post on which they purport to comment.
It is also the IPKat policy that comments should not be made completely anonymously, and users should use a consistent name or pseudonym (which should not itself be defamatory or obscene, or that of another real person), either in the "identity" field, or at the beginning of the comment. Current practice is to, however, allow a limited number of comments that contravene this policy, provided that the comment has a high degree of relevance and the comment chain does not become too difficult to follow.
Learn more here: http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/p/want-to-complain.html