Law Kiwi Farms ruling sets “dubious” copyright precedent, expert warns - Ruling shows how copyright law could become "Kiwi Farms killer," expert says.


ASHLEY BELANGER - 10/18/2023

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Kiwi Farms—a website credited with launching a range of targeted harassment campaigns, which Cloudflare considers its most dangerous customer ever—has remained online despite immense pressure to dismantle the website. But now it looks like Kiwi Farms may be facing its biggest threat yet. This week, an unexpected court ruling has shown "how copyright law could be a Kiwi Farms killer," tech law expert Eric Goldman wrote in his blog.

Goldman's blog analyzed a judgment issued Monday by the United States Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, which reversed a lower court's decision to dismiss a copyright lawsuit filed by Russell Greer. According to Greer, Kiwi Farms targeted him with a harassment campaign so extreme that he wrote a book to explain why the harassment should stop. Kiwi Farms then uploaded the book and a song that Greer wrote, allegedly sharing his copyrighted materials to encourage users to continue mocking Greer.

Greer's troubles with Kiwi Farms started when he sued pop star Taylor Swift in 2016. That's when Kiwi Farms users "began 'a relentless harassment campaign,'" Greer alleged, including “direct harassment via phone, email, and social media." Kiwi Farms' “schemes" allegedly "successfully got him fired from his workplace and evicted” and led to "the creation of 'false social media profiles that impersonate him with names ... that mock his physical and developmental disabilities.'” Kiwi Farms frequently targets people with physical and mental disabilities, Greer told the court.

In his complaint, which he filed on his own without legal representation, Greer alleged that the copyright infringement occurred after Greer "self-published and copyrighted the book, Why I Sued Taylor Swift and How I Became Falsely Known as Frivolous, Litigious, and Crazy, around November 2017." Greer said he wrote the book to help “explain his side of things" and "clear up the slander surrounding him.”

Those hopes were dashed when Kiwi Farms operator Joshua Moon allegedly posted a Google Drive link to a full copy of Greer’s book on the Kiwi Farms website. Greer promptly requested Moon to remove the link, but Moon "refused" and then published Greer’s requests onto Kiwi Farms to incite further mocking. Greer alleged that Kiwi Farms users also flooded review sites with bad reviews to hurt sales and created unauthorized audio versions of his book. Kiwi Farms' goal, Greer alleged, was “purposely" depriving Greer "of making money."

The conflict then further escalated when Greer released a song in 2019 called "I Don't Get You, Taylor Swift," which was uploaded within days to Kiwi Farms' site, where an anonymous Kiwi Farms user "encouraged its dissemination on the site 'so no one else accidentally gives Russell [Greer] money.'" Kiwi Farms users also allegedly exploited Greer's other copyrighted materials, including illegally uploading copies of two additional songs and a screenplay.

After it became clear that Moon would not respond to takedown notices, Greer sued Moon and Kiwi Farms in 2020, but his complaint was dismissed in 2021, when a court ruled that Greer had failed to show that the defendants had "intentionally caused, induced, or materially contributed to the direct infringement."

But the appeals court this week disagreed, deciding that Kiwi Farms' bullying behavior of posting Greer's takedown notices while refusing to take down infringing material "amounted to encouragement of Kiwi Farms users’ direct copyright infringement." Now, the case has been remanded to proceed in a lower court.

Greer's lawyer, Andrew Grimm, told Ars that “we think the opinion will contribute to a fairer and more just society, and we appreciate both the court’s time and the collegiality of our opposing counsel.”

Moon's lawyer did not respond to Ars' request to comment.

Will court uphold “dubious” ruling?​

Greer's case will be revisited by the lower court, giving Greer a second chance to strike back at Kiwi Farms. Goldman said that a victory for Greer still seems unlikely, though, because the appeals court's "dubious" ruling appears to be inconsistent with copyright law, at least as Goldman has "taught the subject for 25+ years."

According to Goldman, the appeals court needed to defend its definition of "encouragement" more "thoroughly" because it appeared that the court "conflated" two legal standards and "messed up long-standing contributory copyright infringement principles." Goldman wrote that under common law, contributory infringement requires a finding that Moon and Kiwi Farms "induce, cause, or materially contribute" direct infringement, not just “encourage" direct infringement, as the appeals court ruled. The court's reference to "encourage" comes from a different legal test, Goldman wrote, and that inconsistency alone could make upholding the appeals court's decision messy for the lower court.

Further, Goldman said that the notion that Kiwi Farms posting the takedown notice after failing to remove infringing content amounted to encouragement of direct copyright infringement is flawed. That logic would seemingly suggest that anyone hit with a copyright claim who posts a notice could be held liable for encouraging infringement.

"That cannot be the right legal standard, and I am reasonably confident no other court would reach that conclusion," Goldman wrote.

Goldman suggested that the court was stretching copyright law to punish Kiwi Farms for its mocking behavior, which he said makes the ruling a "dubious precedent on all points." He warned that people "should be careful celebrating copyright’s censorial powers." Though "few people would lament" Kiwi Farms' demise, this ruling could lead to censorship of "socially beneficial content."

"We definitely don’t want more copyright doctrines that facilitate pernicious removals," Goldman wrote.
 
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October 17, 2023 · by Eric Goldman

Kiwi Farms, operated by Joshua Moon, is best known for coordinating cyberattacks on individuals, especially people with disabilities. Few people would lament the site’s demise, but to date it has avoided legal exposure (1, 2) and survived multiple deplatformings (e.g., CloudFlare’s block). But if you really want Kiwi Farms gone, have you considered using copyright law for its censorial power?

The Court Opinion

Greer was a target of one of Kiwi Farms’ attacks. He self-published a book about the experience (“Why I Sued Taylor Swift and How I Became Falsely Known as Frivolous, Litigious and Crazy“). “Kiwi Farms users provided a Google Drive link to a full copy of Mr. Greer’s book.” Greer emailed Moon asking to remove the book. Moon posted the email for further mocking. Greer also wrote a song (“I Don’t Get You, Taylor Swift”), and “his new song had been uploaded to Kiwi Farms.” Greer then sent Moon the following DMCA takedown notice:

greer.jpg

Moon didn’t remove any content in response to this notice. Instead, he publicly posted the DMCA takedown notice for further mocking. Greer sued Moon and Kiwi Farms for contributory copyright infringement and other claims. The district court dismissed the contributory claim because the defendants didn’t materially contribute to the infringement. The appellate court revives the claim.

[Note: Greer filed the complaint pro se, but he retained counsel for the appeal. The ruling is confusing in part because of the court’s deference to the pro se complaint.]

Direct Infringement. The court says these allegations are sufficient for direct copyright infringement:

Mr. Greer alleged he discovered the book “had been illegally put onto Kiwi Farms” in January 2018. “Somebody,” he explained, “created a copy of [his] book and put it in a Google Drive that is accessible on Kiwi Farms.” The complaint also included allegations “[o]ther users on Kiwi Farms have created unauthorized audio recordings of” the book “and have put them on various sites.” Kiwi Farms, Mr. Greer continued, “has links to these audio recordings.” As to the song, Mr. Greer alleged he found an “MP3 of his song was . . . on Kiwi Farms” in April 2019. A Kiwi Farms user posted the song with the comment “Enjoy this repetitive turd.” Another user commented, “Upload it here so no one accidentally gives [Mr. Greer] money.” The complaint also alleged “Mr. Moon’s users spread Greer’s song across different sites.”

The court says the defendants waived any fair use defense by briefing it inadequately.

Knowledge of Infringement. “Mr. Greer’s takedown notices complied with 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3).” That’s great, but is it relevant? For unexplained reasons, it does not appear that the defendants are invoking the 512 defense. As a result, the opinion only discusses common law contributory infringement claims. But does a statutory notice satisfy the common law knowledge requirement? The court says it does–a logical and defensible conclusion. However, the court should have explained this more because 512(c)(3) expressly says that it only defines what constitutes disqualifying knowledge for purposes of the statutory safe harbor.

Material Contribution to Infringement. Failure to honor the 512(c)(3) notice would disqualify the defendants for 512. However, this isn’t a 512 case. Instead, the court remarkably says that failure to remove content in response to 512(c)(3) does not, without more, constitute a material contribution to third-party infringement. That is inconsistent with how I’ve taught the subject for 25+ years, so it would have been great for the court to defend this proposition more thoroughly.

Yet, at the same time, the court says that Greer adequately alleged the “more” sufficient to satisfy the common law “material contribution” element:

When Mr. Greer discovered the book had been copied and placed in a Google Drive on Kiwi Farms, he “sent Mr. Moon requests to have his book removed . . . .” Mr. Moon pointedly refused these requests. In fact, instead of honoring the requests, Mr. Moon posted his email exchange with Mr. Greer to Kiwi Farms, belittling Mr. Greer’s attempt to protect his copyrighted material without resort to litigation.

After the email request, Kiwi Farms users continued to upload audio recordings of Mr. Greer’s book, followed by digital copies of his song. When Mr. Greer discovered the song on Kiwi Farms, he sent Mr. Moon a takedown notice under the DMCA. Mr. Moon not only refused to follow the DMCA’s process for removal and protection of infringing copies, he “published [the] DMCA request onto [Kiwi Farms],” along with Mr. Greer’s “private contact information.” Mr. Moon then “emailed Greer . . . and derided him for using a template for his DMCA request” and confirmed “he would not be removing Greer’s copyrighted materials.” Following Mr. Moon’s mocking refusal to remove Mr. Greer’s book and his song, Kiwi Farms users “have continued to exploit Greer’s copyrighted material,” including two additional songs and a screenplay…

Mr. Greer’s complaint alleged Mr. Moon knew Kiwi Farms was an audience that had been infringing Mr. Greer’s copyrights and would happily continue to do so. Indeed, Kiwi Farms users had been uploading Mr. Greer’s copyrighted materials with the explicit goal of avoiding anyone “accidentally giv[ing] [Mr. Greer] money.” Further infringement followed—encouraged, and materially contributed to, by Mr. Moon.

So, what exactly is the “more” here beyond Moon’s failure to remove? The court says: “the reposting of the takedown notice, combined with the refusal to take down the infringing material, amounted to encouragement of Kiwi Farms users’ direct copyright infringement.”

Ugh. First, the common law contributory infringement elements refer to “induce, cause, or materially contribute” direct infringement, not “encourage.” The term “encourage” comes from the Grokster inducement test, but the court is very clear that it is applying the common law contributory infringement test, not the inducement test. So in its effort to accommodate a pro se complaint, the court conflated the two doctrines and messed up long-standing contributory copyright infringement principles.

Second, the court seems to be saying that Moon’s inaction was OK, but Moon’s inaction + posting the takedown notice is not OK. What? This suggests that all contributors to Lumen have exacerbated their legal risk by providing greater transparency into the shadowy world of copyright takedown notices. That cannot be the right legal standard, and I am reasonably confident no other court would reach that conclusion. Oy, what a mess.

As a result, the contributory copyright infringement claim is revived and remanded back to the district court.

Implications

This case contributes to the jurisprudence of the copyright exposure of web hosts for third party content when the DMCA online safe harbors are not available. The court’s holding that failing to remove known infringing items isn’t sufficient for contributory copyright infringement would be a huge win for defendants. However, because the defendants lost the ruling by reposting the takedown notice, the outcome is almost worse for defendants. I view this outcome as a situation where the court bent copyright’s legal rules to favor a pro se plaintiff and to punish Kiwi Farms for its mockery and harassment. That makes it dubious precedent on all points.

Because Kiwi Farms creates so many problems for its harassment victims and spurs regulators to call for reactive (over)regulation, I’m sure there is high interest in finding any legal doctrines that could shut it down. This ruling shows how copyright law could be a Kiwi Farms killer–no legal reform required. Yet, we should be careful celebrating copyright’s censorial powers. It might lead to a laudable consequence as applied to Kiwi Farms, but as Prof. Silbey and I have documented, copyright also allows for the widespread scrubbing of socially beneficial content. We definitely don’t want more copyright doctrines that facilitate pernicious removals.

Case citation: Greer v. Moon, 2023 WL 6804866 (10th Cir. Oct. 16, 2023)

BONUS UPDATE: Business Casual Holdings, LLC v. YouTube, LLC, 2023 WL 6842449 (2d Cir. Oct. 17, 2023). “Business Casual asserts that three videos posted by TVNovosti on the RT Arabic channel on YouTube contained copyrighted content.” The district court dismissed the complaint.

Contributory Infringement. The uploader allegedly took steps to conceal the infringement from YouTube. As a result, Business Casual didn’t allege YouTube had knowledge of the infringement before its takedown notices, at which point YouTube promptly removed the videos. Instead,. Business Casual argued that YouTube should have terminated the uploader’s account entirely, not just remove the infringing videos. However, the account didn’t infringe Business Casual’s copyrights further, so account termination wouldn’t have mattered.

Vicarious Infringement. “YouTube did not decline to exercise its right to stop TV-Novosti’s alleged infringement, and instead removed the three videos shortly after learning about their alleged infringement.” More evidence that vicarious and contributory infringement are collapsing into each other.

DMCA Repeat Infringer Policy. Business Casual claimed that YouTube foreclosed the 512 safe harbor because it didn’t follow its repeat infringer policy, an argument the court called “entirely misplaced.” The court resolved the case on the failure of the prima facie elements, so the court never reached YouTube’s DMCA defense. So, “there is no affirmative cause of action for any alleged failure by YouTube to apply its Repeat Infringer Policy in accordance with the DMCA’s safe harbor provisions.” This is why I teach my students to always run through the plaintiff’s prima facie case before turning to the defenses. If the prima facie case fails, the defenses are moot.
 
Count down to Goldman's cancellation commence in 5 4 3 2 1...
<- this link is pushing Unicode in URLs to its limit, WTF
BurntToShreds said:
Goldman is so full of shit. This was copyright infringement through and through. The constant hand-wringing of people and organizations about slippery-slopes specifically in regards to things that are inflicting necessary damage on KF is as mind-boggling and disgusting as it is infuriating. I talked about this on the Forum the other month: The EFF trying to claim that a company like Hurricane Electric using its own conduct policy to dropkick KF's ISP off of their service is another one of these. Acting like open-and-shut cases of infringement and freedom of association (an ISP refusing to peer with another ISP) are dangerous or "dubious" has had me really looking at these folks with the side-eye. At least Goldman actually put his article under his own name instead of EFF just listing it as anonymous on their site...
 
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We've watched them laud people like Keffals as heroes without even batting an eye. I want everyone to mentally prepare themselves to witness Russell Greer on CNN sobbing about how those mean Kiwis cost him his chance with Taylor Swift while the anchor agrees uncritically.
Imagine how fucking funny it would be to see him crying on live television, with his retarded mutant face and ever-open mouth. I can't wait bros, 2024 will be the Year of the Great Harvest. I feel it in my little kiwi wings.
 
Last time we were smeared as an anti-Trans site, but then again, "people with disabilities" is an inclusive term.
Gaining a completely false reputation for being an actively ableist site could be far more damaging than gaining a completely false reputation for being an actively anti-trans site. Normies give a shit about people with disabilities, but most of them don't give a shit about trannies.

Even if this decision snowballs into something where Russhole's illustrious past is brought to light in front a wider audience via discovery, many normies will still feel sorry for him because "he can't help being the way he is", as though being retarded is an excuse to have an inflated sense of entitlement and an uncontrollable urge to harass women.

It might not be enough to kill the Farms, but I see this as being a much larger existential threat than even the biggest DDoS attack LFJ and his cronies can ever hope to cook up.
 
Arstechnica, the site that had writer Dr.Pizza. Who attempted to debunk "pizzagate", then was jailed later for soliciting a minor.
so take it the official CCP position is that arstechnica = bad?

Last time we were smeared as an anti-Trans site, but then again, "people with disabilities" is an inclusive term.
have you see how retarded the average troon is? of course they count as "people with disabilities" also, what do you call not having a cock anymore? id call that a disability.
 
have you see how retarded the average troon is? of course they count as "people with disabilities" also, what do you call not having a cock anymore? id call that a disability.
There was a cult in the Russian Empire that basically did what troons do today but for different reasons.

 
[T]he court seems to be saying that Moon’s inaction was OK, but Moon’s inaction + posting the takedown notice is not OK. What? [ ... ] That cannot be the right legal standard, and I am reasonably confident no other court would reach that conclusion.

agreed.
without an order of the court to the contrary, his correspondence is his to do with as he damned well pleases.
 
Which one of you posted a reasonable comment from an account created 30 minutes ago?
greese said:
Yes, there's some things that are missing in the original post and the followup article.

I can't find the original claim that Joshua Moon was the one who uploaded the book to Google Drive. The blog post this was sourced from, as well as the most recent 10th circuit filing, don't seem to say that directly.

I think Greer's main accusation is that Joshua Moon wasn't taking the links down.

The issue here is probably that it's harder to make a copyright argument about links. Niche cases exist where links have been ordered to be taken down for copyright reasons, but it's pretty rare. Usually individuals seeking to get material taken down are supposed to go to the actual host. In this case, that would be Google Drive.

In my experience, Google Drive is very compliant with their requirements under the DMCA.

I think Greer is really just trying to weaponize the law against people criticizing him on various social media platforms. The original blog post this article references picks apart a lot of flaws in Greer's case.

Ultimately, KF does operate lawfully in the US and properly runs its designated agent. Its designated agent simply is the wrong person to direct DMCA takedown requests to if he wants Google Drive content taken down.
 
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