Columbia Pictures Industries Inc et al v. Gary Fung et alRESPONSEC.D. Cal.July 22, 20131 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES, INC., et al., Plaintiffs, v. GARY FUNG, et al., Defendants. ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) Case No. CV 06-05578 SVW (JCx) JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF NO. 524) Date: August 5, 2013 Time: 1:30 p.m. Ctrm: 6 Judge: Hon. Stephen V. Wilson Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 1 of 23 Page ID #:4971 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) TABLE OF CONTENTS JOINT INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................... 2 JOINT REQUEST ..................................................................................................... 2 PLAINTIFFS’ STATEMENT. .................................................................................. 5 DEFENDANTS’ STATEMENT. ............................................................................ 13 JOINT CONCLUSION ........................................................................................... 21 Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 2 of 23 Page ID #:4972 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 2 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) JOINT INTRODUCTION By Order dated July 1, 2013, the Court instructed the parties to submit a joint pleading discussing proposed “modifications to the permanent injunction that would make it consistent with the Ninth Circuit’s decision.” Order, July 1, 2013 (ECF No. 524). As noted below, the parties have reached an agreement with respect to some but not all of the modifications to the injunction mandated by the Ninth Circuit. This joint pleading advises the Court on the areas of agreement and presents argument from each party on the provisions of the injunction in dispute. Copies of Plaintiffs’ proposed form of injunction are attached as Exhibit A (version showing in redline all changes from the injunction, ECF No. 395, issued by this Court on May 20, 2010) and Exhibit B (clean version). Copies of Defendants’ proposed form of injunction are attached as Exhibit C (version showing in redline all changes from the injunction, ECF No. 395, issued by this Court on May 20, 2010) and Exhibit D (clean version). JOINT REQUEST I. Modifications to the Injunction Agreed to by the Parties. The parties have reached agreement as to modifications to two provisions of the injunction to make the injunction consistent with the Ninth Circuit decision. The two agreed provisions are Paragraphs 1(f)(ii) and 3(j). The agreed proposed injunction language is below. A. Proposed Language to Modify Paragraph 1(f)(ii). The Ninth Circuit identified one sub-part of the definition of “Infringement- Related Terms” in paragraph 1(f)(ii) that needed to be modified to specifically name the terms at issue rather than describe them generally as “terms that are widely known to be associated with copyright infringement.” Columbia Pictures Indus., Inc. v. Fung, 710 F.3d 1020,1048 (9th Cir. 2013). The Ninth Circuit added that plaintiffs “can request modification in the future to add, upon competent proof, specific other terms as well.” Id. Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 3 of 23 Page ID #:4973 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 3 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) In accordance with these instructions, the parties have reached agreement on language for a revised Paragraph 1(f)(ii) and agreed to add a Paragraph 1(f)(iii) to provide for the possibility of future modifications of Paragraph 1(f)(ii). The revised injunction provisions, as agreed by the parties, are as follows: (f) “Infringement-Related Terms” shall mean: * * * (ii) the following terms: “warez,” “Axxo,” “Jaybob,” “DVD Rips,” “Cam,” “Telesync,” “Telecine,” “Screener,” “PPV,” or “R5”; (iii) Plaintiffs may request that this Court modify (ii) above to include additional terms upon competent proof that such terms should be included in Paragraph 1(f)(ii). This revised language is reflected in all versions of the parties’ proposed revised injunction attached hereto as Exhibits A through D. B. Proposed Language to Modify Paragraph 3(j). The Ninth Circuit directed modification to Paragraph 3(j), which prohibits “soliciting or targeting a user base generally understood, in substantial part, to be engaging in infringement” in order to provide additional specificity as to the nature of the enjoined conduct. 710 F.3d at 1048. In accordance with these instructions, in lieu of the above-quoted language, the parties have agreed to prohibitions on specific conduct covered, and have agreed to add language providing for the possibility of future modifications of Paragraph 3(j). The revised injunction provision, as agreed by the parties, is as follows: (j) engaging in any of the following activities with regard to the “Sites” defined below: (i) using the names of any of the Sites in meta tags on any web pages; Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 4 of 23 Page ID #:4974 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 4 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) (ii) bidding on, purchasing or using the names of any of the Sites as keywords in any advertising campaigns; (iii) placing advertisements on any of the Sites; and (iv) advertising by referring to any of the Sites by name. For purpose of this provision, “Sites” shall mean: The Pirate Bay, Torrentspy, Aimster, Kazaa, Grokster, Morpheus, Newzbin, BT Junkie,Torrentreactor.net, kat.ph, torrents.net, SurftheChannel.com, Kino.to, Movie2k.to, and/or Dl4all.com. (v) Plaintiffs may request that this Court modify the injunction to include additional websites upon competent proof that such websites should be added to Paragraph 3(j) This revised language is reflected in all versions of the parties’ proposed revised injunction attached hereto as Exhibits A through D. Below, the parties separately address the remaining areas of disagreement. Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 5 of 23 Page ID #:4975 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 5 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) II. Plaintiffs’ Statement. The Ninth Circuit expressly affirmed virtually all aspects of the permanent injunction entered by this Court, directing only four discrete changes. Fung, 710 F.3d at 1047-49. In addition to directing modifications to Paragraphs 1(f)(ii) and 3(j), as discussed above, the Ninth Circuit ruled that certain specific language in Paragraph 3(l) was too vague, and provided clear guidelines as to precisely how Paragraph 3(l) should be modified. Id. at 1047-48. The Ninth Circuit also ruled that “insofar as the injunction can be interpreted to prohibit Fung from seeking legitimate employment” it must be amended to “appropriately…limit the employment prohibition.” Id. at 1049. Otherwise, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the injunction in all respects, expressly finding that Defendants’ challenges to all other provisions of the injunction were “without merit.” Id. at 1047 n.22. The parties made progress in narrowing their disputes. As the Court will see, the most significant remaining disputes do not concern the Ninth Circuit decision at all, but rather Defendants’ wholesale attempt to reargue and rewrite entire portions of the injunction that were expressly affirmed by the Ninth Circuit or that Defendants never raised on appeal. Respectfully, the Court should not entertain such modifications. For the reasons set forth below, Plaintiffs respectfully request that the Court adopt Plaintiff’s proposed injunction attached hereto as Exhibits A (redline version) and B (clean version). A. The Court Should Adopt Plaintiffs’ Proposed Modifications to Paragraph 3(l). As entered by this Court, Paragraph 3(l) prohibits “indexing or providing access to Dot-torrent or similar files harvested or collected from well-known infringing source sites, such as ‘The Pirate Bay.’” As to Paragraph 3(l), the Ninth Circuit stated: Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 6 of 23 Page ID #:4976 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 6 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) Paragraph 3(1) must be amended to omit the vague words “well- known infringing source sites, such as,” and to specify the particular infringing sites covered-with the caveat, again, that Plaintiffs can seek to amend the list in the future. Id. at 1048. Thus, the Ninth Circuit did not take issue with the prohibition on indexing Dot-torrent files from well-known infringing source sites, or with the prohibition on indexing Dot-torrent files from “The Pirate Bay,” which is identified by name in Paragraph 3(l). The Ninth Circuit’s only objection was that the phrase “well-known infringing source sites” was vague. The Court instructed that covered sites should be identified by name (as was done for The Pirate Bay). Id. In accordance with these instructions, Plaintiffs propose to do just as directed by the Ninth Circuit. Plaintiffs propose language that removes the phrase “well-known infringing source sites, such as” and identifies by name the other sites covered by Paragraph 3(l). The revised Paragraph 3(l) proposed by Plaintiffs is as follows: (l) indexing or providing access to Dot-torrent or similar files harvested or collected from the following sites or services: The Pirate Bay, Torrentspy, BT Junkie, Torrentreactor.net, kat.ph, or torrents.net; (i) Plaintiffs may request that this Court modify the injunction to include additional source websites upon competent proof that such websites should be added to Paragraph 3(l). This proposed language fully addresses the Ninth Circuit’s ruling. The five sites Plaintiffs propose to be added are all undeniably well-known infringing BitTorrent sites. Each is an adjudicated infringer or has been the Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 7 of 23 Page ID #:4977 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 7 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) subject of a court order blocking access to the site in other countries.1 That should be more than sufficient. Defendants’ seeming objection to these sites as “well- known infringing source sites” is inexplicable. These are the same sites that are included by name in the revised Paragraph 3(j) - which Defendants have agreed to - as sites whose users are “generally understood…to be engaging in infringement.” See supra at 2-3. Notably, the Ninth Circuit never questioned the “well known infringing source site” standard this Court adopted in Paragraph 3(l); it merely directed that sites meeting that standard should be named in the provision. Plaintiffs also have added a provision per the Ninth Circuit’s express instruction that “Plaintiffs can seek to amend the list in the future.” Id. Defendants previously had objected to including any sites in Paragraph 3(l) unless the sites had been adjudicated to be infringing by a U.S. court for hosting content, which would have excluded The Pirate Bay (not adjudicated in a U.S. court) and virtually all other BitTorrent sites worldwide (as these sites do not host content files). However, Defendants appear to have abandoned that suggestion. Regardless, the Court should not permit Defendants to re-litigate aspects of this provision left unaffected by the Ninth Circuit decision. If Defendants wished to challenge the “well-known infringing source sites” standard, to argue it was overly broad or incorrect (as opposed to just too vague), Defendants could have raised that issue with the Ninth Circuit. They did not. As the sites added to the list in Plaintiffs’ proposed revision have been actually adjudicated to be infringing or 1See, e.g., Trib. di Caligari, 19 apr. 2011, n. 3535/11 (Italian blocking order regarding BT Junkie); Telenor v. IFPI Danmark, Case No. 153/2009 (Den. H. May 27, 2010) (Danish order blocking access to The Pirate Bay); Columbia Pictures Indus., Inc. v. Bunnell, No. 06-CV-01093-FMC-JC, Judgment and Permanent Injunction, dated May 5, 2008 (ECF No. 409) (copyright infringement liability judgment against Torrentspy defendants). Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 8 of 23 Page ID #:4978 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 8 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) have been the subject of a court order blocking access to the site, they far exceed the standard adopted by this Court. Defendants, who agreed to the same sites in Paragraph 3(j), cannot credibly dispute that the additional sites are “well-known infringing source sites” - and, indeed, in all of the parties’ meet-and-confer discussions, Defendants never so asserted. B. The Court Should Adopt Plaintiffs’ Proposed Amendment Addressing the “Legitimate Employment” Issue. The Ninth Circuit directed that the injunction be amended “insofar as the injunction can be interpreted to prohibit [individual Defendant Gary] Fung from seeking legitimate employment,” including employment “for any technology company whose services others might use to infringe copyright, even if those other companies are not themselves liable for primary or secondary copyright infringement.” 710 F.3d at 1049. Here, the Ninth Circuit did not propose any specific suggestions for how the injunction should be modified to address this issue, “leav[ing] the final wording to the district court.” Id. In order to address the Ninth Circuit’s opinion, Plaintiffs proposed a number of revisions to the injunction during the meet and confer process with Defendants. In the end, the parties were in agreement as to the structure of the needed revisions - a new Paragraph 13 clarifying that Mr. Fung would not be in violation of the injunction based exclusively on actions of a third party employer - but could not come to agreement on the final language embodying that concept. Plaintiffs’ proposal is as follows: Gary Fung, individually, shall not be deemed to be in violation of this injunction solely as a result of his being a bona fide employee or independent contractor of a third party entity that may be engaged in acts that violate this injunction or whose services might be used by third parties to engage in infringement, provided that Mr. Fung does not personally direct or participate in conduct that violates this Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 9 of 23 Page ID #:4979 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) injunction. For purposes of this paragraph, Mr. Fung shall not be deemed to be a “a bona fide employee or independent contractor” of a third party entity if Mr. Fung (a) has, or has a right to receive, a direct or indirect ownership interest in the third party entity of 5% or greater, or (b) has a right to receive, directly or indirectly, 5% or greater of the revenues or profits of the third party entity. As the Court can see from Defendants’ proposal, there are only two points of disagreement between the parties. First, Defendants would delete the clause “provided that Mr. Fung does not personally direct or participate in conduct that violates this injunction.” See Ex. C, ¶ 13. However, this key qualifier is important because otherwise Mr. Fung could himself personally operate Isohunt or a comparable site, without abiding by the injunction, and still argue that he remains in full compliance with the injunction. Respectfully, that is not what the Ninth Circuit meant by “legitimate employment.” Plaintiffs’ proposal ensures that Mr. Fung will never be held in contempt based on the conduct of a bona fide employer; however, Mr. Fung cannot thereby be relieved of his obligation to follow the injunction as to his own personal conduct. To do so, could permit Mr. Fung to easily circumvent the injunction prohibitions. In the parties’ meet-and-confer discussions, Defendants professed that they wanted to delete the “personally participate in or direct” language because, in some undefined way, it might be interpreted to bind a third party employer to comply with the injunction. That of course is not true. The persons bound by an injunction are established by Rule 65(d)(2). Nevertheless, to appease Defendants’ professed concern, Plaintiffs had proposed a further clarification, which would provide expressly that “nothing in this injunction requires a third party entity in a bona fide employment relationship with Mr. Fung to itself comply with the terms of this injunction unless such third party entity satisfies the criteria under Rule Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 10 of 23 Page ID #:4980 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 10 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) 65(d)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” Without explanation, Defendants rejected Plaintiffs’ clarification. The “personally participate in or direct” language does nothing to restrict Mr. Fung from legitimate employment even if his employer’s services might be used in a manner that violates the terms of the injunction. It merely clarifies that Fung may not personally engage in the proscribed conduct merely because he is acting as an employee rather than as the owner and operator of an infringing site. Second, Defendants would delete the last sentence in Plaintiffs’ proposed Paragraph 13. However, Plaintiffs include the last sentence defining the limits of “bona fide” employment to provide a clear and unambiguous line between “legitimate employment” as referenced by the Ninth Circuit and what is effectively ownership. If Mr. Fung has a material ownership interest in a company that may technically “employ” him, that should not excuse him from complying with the injunction. Likewise, if Mr. Fung has a right to receive a material portion of a company’s revenues or profit, he is not a bona fide employee in so far as the injunction is concerned; rather, he continues to have the same incentives as an owner to promote copyright infringement. Plaintiffs included a defined threshold to avoid complaints or challenges later by Mr. Fung that he did not understand the line separating “legitimate employment” and ownership. Plaintiffs submit that the 5% threshold level is a reasonable level to define whether Mr. Fung will have the earmarks of ownership, rather than “legitimate employment.” If the threshold is set much higher, Mr. Fung will be permitted to profit substantially from conduct prohibited by the injunction. Moreover, he theoretically could operate an Isohunt-like site with a number of co-owners and claim Paragraph 13 immunizes him because he is technically “employed” by the third party company operating the site. C. The Court Should Reject Defendants’ Efforts to Revise Provisions of the Injunction Affirmed by the Ninth Circuit. Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 11 of 23 Page ID #:4981 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 11 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) Defendants have proposed a myriad of other revisions to provisions of the injunction that were expressly affirmed by the Ninth Circuit or that Defendants did not object to on appeal. Respectfully, the Court should reject Defendants’ efforts to reargue injunction provisions that already have been argued extensively and ruled on by this Court. E.g., United States v. Thrasher, 483 F.3d 977, 981-82 (9th Cir. 2007) (“law of the case” doctrine precludes a court from reconsidering an issue previously decided by the same court or a higher court in the same case); Armstrong v. Schwarzenegger, 261 F.R.D. 173, 177 (N.D. Cal. 2009) (applying “law of the case” doctrine to foreclose challenge to provisions of injunction upheld on appeal), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, 622 F.3d 1058 (9th Cir. 2010); see also ECF Nos. 395, 403-4, 404, 411, 421-22, 424, 429, 436, 439 (multiple rounds of injunction briefing). Defendants’ proposed changes, moreover, are facially unreasonable: • Defendants propose to delete virtually all of the first ten pages of the injunction. See Ex. C at 2-11. • Defendants propose to substantially rewrite the core injunction provision that prohibits them from indexing or providing access to Dot-torrent files for Plaintiffs’ copyrighted works. See Ex. C ¶ 2(a), at 12. Defendants did not even appeal the aspects of Paragraph 2(a) that they now seek to rewrite. Moreover, Defendants sought to similarly limit Paragraph 2(a) before the Court first entered the injunction and the Court rightly rejected Defendants’ efforts. ECF Nos. 422, 422-1, 422-2 (Defendants’ response to proposed injunction ). • Defendants propose to delete all of Paragraph 2(b) which prohibits Defendants from “assisting with end user reproductions or transmissions of any Copyrighted Works ….” See Ex. C ¶ 2(b), at 12. Again, Defendants never appealed Paragraph 2(b). Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 12 of 23 Page ID #:4982 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) • Defendants propose to delete Paragraph 3(k) of the injunction entirely. Again, Defendants did not appeal Paragraph 3(k). See Ex. C ¶ 3(k), at 14. • Defendants propose to rewrite Section 5(e) to require the Court to review and approve each and every new title for Plaintiffs’ copyrighted works before Defendants have any obligation to comply with the injunction as to those works. See Ex. C ¶ 5(e), at 16. The Court already has amended Paragraph 5 to require Plaintiffs to provide additional information to Defendants as to each title. Order Denying Stay of Injunction, June 11, 2010 (ECF No. 445), at 6. Since that Order, Defendants have not raised a single objection or complaint as to Plaintiffs’ title lists. Moreover, although Defendants raised several aspects of Paragraph 5 on appeal, those challenges were rejected by the Ninth Circuit. 710 F.3d at 1047 n.22. • Defendants propose to modify Paragraph 10, which the Ninth Circuit expressly affirmed. Id. Moreover, the footnote Defendants propose to add would undo the Ninth Circuit’s affirmance on the very issue raised by Defendants on appeal and rejected by the Ninth Circuit. See Ex. C ¶ 10, at 18 n.1. The above examples are not exhaustive of Defendants’ attempt to reargue the injunction. See also Ex. C, ¶¶ 1(f)(i), 3, 5(a). Plaintiffs oppose all changes beyond those directed by the Ninth Circuit. Under the guise of addressing the Ninth Circuit decision, Defendants are effectively seeking broad reconsideration of the injunction. This Court should reject all such reconsideration.2 2 Paradoxically, if the Court were to modify provisions of the injunction affirmed by the Ninth Circuit, unless the Court accepted Defendants’ language without any alteration, Defendants might argue that they have a right to appeal such previously affirmed provisions. Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 13 of 23 Page ID #:4983 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 13 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) II. Defendants’ Statement. I. Defendants’ Preliminary Statement The Ninth Circuit found “several provisions” of the prior injunction “fail[ed]” to meet the standard of Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure3 because they were “more burdensome than necessary,” “too vague,” “too imprecise,” and “confusing.” In requiring this Court to modify the prior injunction, the Ninth Circuit held that the injunction must be amended so that it was not an improper barrier to Mr. Fung’s legitimate employment. In multiple other areas, the Ninth Circuit held that additional clarity was required, and that the injunction must be modified to more clearly specify the conduct that is prohibited.4 Fung, 710 F.3d at 1047-48. Defendants’ Proposed Modified Injunction is 3 All further statutory references are to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure unless otherwise noted. 4 As the Ninth Circuit explained: Rule 65(d) requires “[e]very order granting an injunction” to “state its terms specifically” and to “describe in reasonable detail…the act or acts restrained or required.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(d)(1)(B)-(C). “‘[O]ne basic principle built into Rule 65 is that those against whom an injunction is issued should receive fair and precisely drawn notice of what the injunction actually prohibits.’” Fortyune v. Am. Multi- Cinema, Inc., 364 F.3d 1075, 1086-87 (9th Cir.2004)…“The Rule was designed to prevent uncertainty and confusion on the part of those faced with injunctive orders, and to avoid the possible founding of a contempt citation on a decree too vague to be understood.” Id. (quoting Schmidt v. Lessard, 414 U.S. 473, 476, 94 S.Ct. 713, 38 L.Ed.2d 661 (1974)). Generally speaking, “an ordinary person reading the court’s order should be able to ascertain from the document itself exactly what conduct is proscribed.” 11A Charles A. Wright et al. Federal Practice & Procedure § 2955 (2d ed.). Columbia Pictures v. Fung, 710 F.3d 1020, 1048 (9th Cir. 2013) (“Fung”). Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 14 of 23 Page ID #:4984 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 14 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) consistent with the guidelines provided by the Ninth Circuit and would provide Mr. Fung the freedom to seek legitimate employment, and the certainty and clarity required by Rule 65(d). [Exs. C-D.] Plaintiffs’ Proposed Modified Injunction remains an improper employment prohibition, as well as uncertain, vague and confusing. [Exs. A-B.]5 The parties were unable to come to agreement regarding several provisions addressed in Defendants’ Proposed Modified Injunction, namely: (1) ensuring that consistent with the Ninth Circuit’s Order, there is not an overly burdensome employment prohibition placed on Mr. Fung; (2) clarifying the extraterritoriality conclusion reached by the Ninth Circuit; (3) removing from 1(f) the uncertain terms “commonly understood names” and “common names” of Plaintiff’s works in favor of the clear term “titles”; (4) clarifying 3(l) consistent with the Ninth Circuit directive; (5) bringing greater clarity by removing 2(b) and 3(k) because it is unclear how Defendants could be expected to comply with such provisions; (6) removing the unnecessary and confusing language from 3 and 5(a) “without limitation;” (7) adding language to clarify 2(a) and 5(e); and (8) removing as unnecessary argumentative discussion presented by Plaintiffs in connection with the original injunction. While Plaintiffs have suggested that some of Defendants’ proposed modifications are outside the parameters of the Ninth Circuit’s direction, each modification Defendants have proposed flows directly from guidance provided by the Ninth Circuit. As the Ninth Circuit left this Court free to determine the precise 5 Defendants include in their supporting Declaration greater detail regarding the parties meet and confer efforts. [Ranahan Decl. at ¶¶ 2-5.] Defendants also include a redline between the parties’ proposed injunctions so it is clear what is disputed. [Id. at Ex. 1] Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 15 of 23 Page ID #:4985 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 15 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) language to achieve the required changes, Defendants respectfully request that the Court enter their Proposed Modified Injunction. II. Defendants’ Proposed Modifications (1) Defendants Seek To Enforce The Ninth Circuit’s Finding That The Injunction Shall Not Prohibit Mr. Fung From Legitimate Employment The Ninth Circuit agreed with Defendants that the injunction was “unduly burdensome” and “more burdensome than necessary” because: certain provisions of the injunction could be interpreted to prevent Fung from ever working for any technology company whose services others might use to infringe copyright, even if those other companies are not themselves liable for primary or secondary copyright infringement. Fung at 1049 (citing L.A. Haven Hospice, Inc. v. Sebelius, 638 F.3d 644, 664 (9th Cir.2011) (“‘[I]njunctive relief should be no more burdensome to the defendant than necessary...”). As Defendants pointed out on appeal, companies like “YouTube and Google” perform the same functions described in the injunction, as such companies “aggregate similar information” and “solicit similar user bases.” [Appellants’ Brief, 9th Cir. Dkt. 38, at 34 of 40).] Thus, the “Permanent Injunction would prohibit Fung from seeking employment with YouTube or Google, as well as prohibiting employment with any other large online service provider.” [Id.] As Defendants further noted to the Ninth Circuit, “Google carries out ‘hosting, indexing, linking to, or otherwise providing access to…Dot- torrent…files that…lead to…Copyrighted Works,’” and the “prohibition will be for the rest of Fung’s life.” [Id. at 34-35] After considering these very examples and arguments, the Ninth Circuit held that “the permanent injunction should be amended appropriately to limit the employment prohibition,” though the Ninth Circuit left to this Court the “final Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 16 of 23 Page ID #:4986 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 16 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) wording” to ensure this was achieved. Fung at 1049. Plaintiffs’ proposed Paragraph 13 would impose precisely the type of employment prohibition the Ninth Circuit found unlawful and thus remains more “burdensome than necessary.” Id. It would effectively prevent Mr. Fung from working at a legitimate business in the technology field, including companies like Google or Yahoo, in light of basic search engine functions. Plaintiffs’ proposal could also be interpreted to impose filtering or other obligations upon third party employers of Mr. Fung that have never been adjudicated, thus creating a chilling effect on the extent to which third party prospective employers could hire Mr. Fung in the future. The parties nearly reached compromise on this Paragraph as set forth below, except that Plaintiffs sought to include the below stricken language, which could essentially be read to require third party employers to comply with the injunction if Mr. Fung was carrying out legitimate job responsibilities. [Ranahan Decl. Ex., 2.] Gary Fung individually, shall not be deemed to be in violation of this injunction merely by virtue of his bona fide employment relationship with a third party entity that may be engaged in acts that violate this injunction or whose services might be used by third parties to engage in infringement, provided that Mr. Fung does not personally participate in or direct conduct that violates this injunction. For purposes of this paragraph, a bona fide employment relationship might include work performed by Mr. Fung as independent contractor provided that such relationship is substantial similar to a bona fide employment relationship. If Mr. Fung was employed by a third party like Google or Yahoo, and had any responsibility generally directing or developing search functions for search engines or indices-Plaintiffs could insist that constituted “directing” “conduct” in violation of the injunction. In other words, the loose and expansive language Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 17 of 23 Page ID #:4987 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 17 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) proposed by Plaintiffs could mean that Fung or his employer could violate the injunction merely because Fung supervised search functionality of the employer. This could very realistically have a severe chilling effect on Mr. Fung’s future employment in violation of the Ninth Circuit’s direction, if he came with an injunction attached that could impose obligations upon lawful, DMCA compliant companies that they otherwise would not have. Indeed, the Court did not generally enjoin BitTorrent search engines or peer to peer technology and related services and systems. Plaintiffs’ Paragraph 13 reverts to their initial proposal, and is the equivalent of the employment prohibition the Ninth Circuit found unlawful. [Ex. A, ¶13.] Plaintiffs’ proposed restrictions regarding ownership percentages bear no connection to the language of the Ninth Circuit, and are overly broad. Technology companies routinely offer employees stock options, and the language regarding a 5% or greater “direct or indirect ownership interest” or regarding a right to “receive, directly or indirectly, 5% or greater of the revenues or profits of the third party entity” would prohibit Mr. Fung from entering such common stock arrangements, and legitimate employment in the technology field. Plaintiffs’ addition is also unnecessary because any future employer of Fung will have its own incentives to require compliance with the law or face its own potential liability. For these reasons, Defendants respectfully request that the Court enter their proposed Paragraph 13. (2) Defendants Seek To Clarify The Conclusion Regarding Extraterritoriality Reached by the Ninth Circuit The Ninth Circuit held that despite certain language in the injunction, it was not “impermissibly extraterritorial.” (Fung at 1047, note 22) Consistent with this statement, Defendants proposed adding a footnote at the end of Paragraph 10 stating: “As the Ninth Circuit noted in its Order ‘the injunction explicitly applies only to acts of infringement ‘that take place in the United States.’’” Columbia Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 18 of 23 Page ID #:4988 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 18 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) Pictures Indus., 710 F.3d at 1047 n. 22. Nothing in this Injunction should be interpreted or understood to apply to users residing outside the United States.” Plaintiffs’ counsel declined to include this footnote or even discuss it, claiming that it fell outside of the Ninth Circuit Order (even though it quotes the Ninth Circuit Order). Because Plaintiffs have not articulated any good reason to exclude this clarifying footnote, and light of the importance of clarity on this issue given that the injunction does not apply to IsoHunt users abroad, Defendants respectfully request that it be included. (3) Defendants Seek to Remove Uncertain Phrases From 1(f)(i) The Ninth Circuit found that the “injunction’s definition of a key phrase ‘Infringement-Related Terms’ is too vague to provide the notice required by Rule 65(d).” Fung at 1048. The only remaining disagreement between the parties on definitions concerns (1)(f)(i), where Defendants seek to remove the similarly vague phrases “commonly understood” and “common name” in favor of the titles of Plaintiffs’ works as follows: (f) “Infringement-Related Terms” shall mean: (i) terms that refer to the titles or commonly understood names of Plaintiffs’ Copyrighted Works (for example, the full title or common name of a television series); Although the Ninth Circuit found the phrase “generally understood” to be “too imprecise,” Plaintiffs want to leave in “commonly understood.” There is no meaningful difference between the phrases “commonly understood” and “generally understood,” and thus the Ninth Circuit Opinion supports removing these phrases. Defendants’ proposed revision to 1(f)(i) is also appropriate given that the Ninth Circuit held that Defendants had no obligation to correct Plaintiffs’ lists of titles or ascertain alternate titles. Fung at 1048-49. It is unclear how Defendants could be expected to know what Plaintiffs consider to be “commonly understood” Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 19 of 23 Page ID #:4989 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 19 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) alternatives to the titles of their works. During the meet and confer, Plaintiffs refused to consider including what they believed to be “commonly understood names” in the lists provided to Defendants. [Ranahan Decl. ¶ 4.] The Court should thus excise the phrases “common name” and “commonly understood” as proposed by Defendants. (4) Defendants Seek To Bring Clarity to (3)(l) The Ninth Circuit also found that paragraph 3(1) requires more specificity. As the Ninth Circuit found, “beyond the specifically named examples, no one reading the injunction can tell what it means….” and that “the injunction must “specify the particular infringing sites covered.” Fung at 1047-48. Accordingly, Defendants seek to leave in “Pirate Bay,” the specific particular infringing site that to date, the Court has found to be appropriately covered by the injunction. While Plaintiffs understandably seek to maximize flexibility so they may continue to seek modifications indefinitely, the Ninth Circuit was clear that “Rule 65(d) prefers certainty to flexibility.” Id. at 1048. Plaintiffs’ proposed revisions add several sites before Plaintiffs have made any showing demonstrating why they should be included, and Defendants should be able to respond. Defendants do not dispute that Plaintiffs can apply to the Court to add appropriate sites, but the Ninth Circuit did not order that this right must be specifically included in the modified injunction without any showing. Some meaning should be given to Plaintiffs’ requisite showing to justify modification, including why the sites Plaintiffs seek to add contain alleged infringements of Plaintiffs’ works. Plaintiffs have no general right to police the Internet for infringements on behalf of third parties’ unproven rights to works. (5) Defendants Seek To Clarify 2(b) and 3(k) Because it is Entirely Unclear How Defendants Could Be Expected to Comply With Such Provisions Paragraph 2(b), which purports to prevent Defendants from “assisting with end-user reproductions or transmissions of any of the Copyrighted Works through Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 20 of 23 Page ID #:4990 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 20 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) a tracker server, or any other server or software that assists users in locating, identifying or obtaining files from other users offering any of the Copyrighted Works for transmission,” is vague and unclear in that it does not offer specificity that would provide Defendants notice about how to comply. It too violates the Ninth Circuit’s requirement for fair and precisely drawn notice and should be removed. Paragraph 3(k) as it currently stands, purports to impose obligations upon Defendants not to “transfer[] or redirect[] users of the Isohunt System to any other service that, directly or indirectly, provides access to unauthorized copies of Plaintiffs’ Copyrighted Works” (emphasis added). How Defendants could be expected to monitor whether unnamed other services are “directly or indirectly” providing access to Plaintiff’s Copyrighted Works is unknown, and this provision violates the Ninth Circuit Order’s requirement for specificity. Fung, 710 F.3d at 1048-49 (finding language that fails to give notice “too imprecise”). (6) Defendants Propose Removing “Without Limitation” from 3 and 5(a) as Unnecessary and Vague Defendants also propose removing the superfluous and confusing phrase “without limitation” from 3 and 5(a), as of course there are limitations-the injunction is required to provide notice of the scope. These terms are unnecessary and only contradict the very purpose of Rule 65. (7) Defendants Propose Language to Clarify 2(a) and 5(e) Defendants’ proposal for 2(a) simply seeks to clarify that it applies to files that contain the title of Copyright Works provided by Plaintiffs-otherwise Defendants are left guessing to which files it applies-and with 5(e) to tie the compliance time to the Court actually making a determination that titles are properly subject to the Injunction, rather than Plaintiffs’ notice. Plaintiffs refused to discuss these provisions, claiming they fall outside the Ninth Circuit Opinion. [Ranahan Decl. ¶ 5.] But clarity and the notice sufficient for Defendants to Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 21 of 23 Page ID #:4991 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 21 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) comply were squarely addressed in the Ninth Circuit Opinion, which specifically rejected terminology left undefined. Fung at 1048-49. (“too vague” where no one reading injunction can reasonably ascertain what is required). Defendants’ proposed modifications should be accepted. (8) Plaintiffs’ Argument Presented in Connection With the Original Injunction Is Unnecessary to the Modified Injunction The parties were required to negotiate and agree to a modified injunction, not re-litigate whether Plaintiffs should be entitled to an injunction in the first place. Defendants do not agree to include arguments advanced by Plaintiffs that no longer have any relevance as to whether an injunction will issue in the first instance. The preliminary statement and background should be stricken and condensed to account for the relevant context as set forth in Defendants’ Proposed Modified Injunction. JOINT CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs and Defendants respectfully submit that the Court should adopt their respective proposed modified injunctions. Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 22 of 23 Page ID #:4992 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 22 JOINT PLEADING REGARDING PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO THE PERMANENT INJUNCTION PURSUANT TO THE COURT’S JULY 1, 2013 ORDER (ECF No. 524) Dated: July 22, 2013 Respectfully submitted, By: /s/ Steven B. Fabrizio Steven B. Fabrizio STEVEN B. FABRIZIO JENNER & BLOCK LLP 1099 New York Avenue NW Suite 900 Washington, DC 20001 GIANNI P. SERVODIDIO JENNER & BLOCK LLP 919 Third Avenue 37th Floor New York, NY 10022 KAREN R. THORLAND FARNAZ M. ALEMI MOTION PICTURE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA 15301 Ventura Boulevard Building E Sherman Oaks, CA 91403 Attorneys for Plaintiffs By: /s/ Michael S. Elkin Michael S. Elkin MICHAEL S. ELKIN THOMAS P. LANE WINSTON & STRAWN LLP 200 Park Avenue New York, NY 10166 ERIN R. RANAHAN WINSTON & STRAWN LLP 333 S. Grand Avenue 38th Floor Los Angeles, CA 90071 JENNIFER A. GOLINVEAUX ROBB C. ADKINS THOMAS J. KEARNEY WINSTON & STRAWN LLP 101 California Street Suite 3900 San Francisco, CA 94111 IRA P. ROTHKEN JARED R. SMITH ROBERT L. KOVSKY ROTHKEN LAW FIRM Three Hamilton Landing Suite 280 Novato, CA 94949 Attorneys for Defendants Case 2:06-cv-05578-SVW-JC Document 544 Filed 07/22/13 Page 23 of 23 Page ID #:4993