ORDER
Upon review of Magistrate Judge Beth P. Gesner’s June 17, 2010 Report and Recommendation, to which no objections have been filed, it is, this 15th day of July 2010, ORDERED that:
1. Judge Gesner’s Report and Recommendation (Paper No. 23) BE, and HEREBY IS, ADOPTED AS AN ORDER OF THE COURT;
2. Agora Financial’s motion for default judgment (Paper No. 10) BE, and HEREBY IS, DENIED;
3. This case BE, and HEREBY IS, CLOSED; and
4. The Clerk of the Court shall send copies of this Order to the parties.
REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION
This case has been referred to the undersigned pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636 and Local Rules 301 and 302 to conduct proceedings and submit a report and recommendation regarding the entry of default judgment and the appropriate amount of damages to be awarded to plaintiffs. (Paper No. 13.) For the reasons discussed herein, I respectfully recommend that plaintiffs’ Motion for a Default Judgment (Paper No. 10) be DENIED and no damages be awarded.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs Agora Financial, LLC, Oxford Club, LLC, Taipan Publishing Group, LLC, Stansberry and Associates Investment Research, LLC, and Sovereign Offshore, LLC publish financial investment newsletters featuring articles written by respected financial analysts employed by plaintiffs. (Compl. ¶ 4, Paper No. 1 at 2; Mem. Supp. Pis.’ Mot. Def. J., Paper No. 10-2 at 3.) In these articles, plaintiffs’ financial analysts recommend broad investment strategies as well as specific investments to plaintiffs’ readers. (Id.; The Oxford Club Communiqué, Apr. 1, 2010, Paper No. 16 at 13-25.) Plaintiffs’ publications also contain “portfolios,” or lists summarizing plaintiffs’ analysts’ recommended investments. (The Oxford Investment Portfolio, Paper No. 16 at 26-27.) These publications are sent to plaintiffs’ paid subscribers and are a vital component of plaintiffs’ business. (Decl. of Julia Cooke Guth, Executive Director, The Oxford Club, LLC, Nov. 17, 2009, Paper No. 10 Attach. 8 at 1-2.)
According to plaintiffs, defendant Martin Samler operates the website Tipstraders.com. (Compl. ¶ 5.) Without plaintiffs’ authorization, defendant posts on his website the investment recommendations contained in plaintiffs’ publications and profits from these postings by charging individuals access to his website.
(Id.)
Specifically,
one
page
of
defendant’s website lists hundreds of financial analysts, including plaintiffs’ financial analysts, next to their affiliated financial entities, including plaintiffs. (Tipstraders.com, List of Tipsters, Paper No. 10 Attach. 3 at 1-5; Guth Deck, Paper No. 10 Attach. 8 at 2.) By clicking
Defendant’s site expressly disclaims any affiliation, endorsement, or sponsorship by or with those analysts whose recommendations it reproduces or those analysts’ affiliated financial entities. (Id. at 11-18.) For example, Tipstraders.com provides the following disclaimer at the bottom of the page listing Mr. Green’s purported recommendations:
Tipstrader.com is in no way affiliated with or endorsed or sponsored by Alexander Green or The Oxford Club, nor do we claim to represent the performance of their publication. The picks above are, unless otherwise stated, entered by registered members of TipsTraders.com in accordance with our general methodology and respecting any proprietary rights. Analysts are likely to have recommended trades not listed here, and at different times of entry. Analysts are also likely to offer an exit strategy very different from ours.
(Id. at 16.) 2
Plaintiffs filed a Complaint in this court on May 8, 2009 asserting two causes of action. (Paper No. 1.) First, plaintiffs claim that defendant’s conduct constitutes a “hot news” misappropriation of their writers’ investment recommendations under the doctrine set forth in
International News Service v. Associated Press,
After defendant failed to file an answer or otherwise defend against plaintiffs’ Complaint, plaintiffs filed a Motion for a Default Judgment (Paper No. 10) on November 23, 2009. On January 5, 2010, the Clerk of this Court entered an Order of Default against defendant Martin Samler for want of answer or other defense. (Paper No. 12.) On January 22, 2010, Judge Quarles referred this case to the undersigned to review plaintiffs’ Motion for a Default Judgment and to make recommendations regarding the entry of default
II. STANDARD FOR ENTRY OF DEFAULT JUDGMENT
In reviewing plaintiffs’ Motion for a Default Judgment (Paper No. 10), the court accepts as true the well-pleaded factual allegations in the complaint as to liability.
Ryan v. Homecomings Fin. Network,
If the court determines that liability is established, the court must then determine the appropriate amount of damages.
Ryan,
In sum, the court must (1) determine whether the unchallenged facts in plaintiffs’ complaint constitute a legitimate cause of action, and, if they do, (2) make an independent determination regarding the appropriate amount of damages.
III. DEFENDANT’S LIABILITY
As noted above, plaintiffs’ Complaint sets forth two causes of action: (1) a “hot news” misappropriation claim; and (2) a claim under Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act. A discussion of each cause of action follows.
A. Plaintiffs’ “Hot News” Misappropriation Claim
The central issue with respect to plaintiffs’ “hot news” misappropriation claim is whether this claim is preempted by federal copyright law. The “hot news” misappropriation cause of action was first recognized in
International News Service v.
As
sociated Press,
Before analyzing AP’s unfair competition claim, the Supreme Court discussed the relationship between AP’s claim and copyright law.
Id.
at 234,
After noting that the Copyright Act does not extend to news itself, the Court turned its attention to whether the doctrine of unfair competition afforded AP’s news matter protection.
Id.
at 234-35,
The right of the purchaser of a single newspaper to spread knowledge of its contents gratuitously, for any legitimate purpose not unreasonably interfering with complainant’s right to make merchandise of it, may be admitted; but to transmit that news for commercial use, in competition with complainant — which is what defendant has done and seeks to justify — is a very different matter. In doing this, defendant, by its very act, admits that it is taking material that has been acquired by complainant as the result of organization and the expenditure of labor, skill, and money, and which is salable by complainant for money, and that defendant in appropriating it and selling it as its own is endeavoring to reap where it has not sown, and by disposing of it to newspapers that are competitors of complainant’s members is appropriating to itself the harvest of those who have sown. Stripped of all disguises, the process amounts to an unauthorized interference with the normal operation of complainant’s legitimate business precisely at the point where the profit is to be reaped, in order to divert a material portion of the profit from those who have earned it to those who have not; with special advantage to defendant in the competition because of the fact that it is not burdened with any part of the expense of gathering the news. The transaction speaks for itself and a court of equity ought not to hesitate long in characterizing it as unfair competition in business.
Id.
at 239-40,
“Thus, in
INS,
the misappropriation doctrine was developed to protect costly efforts to gather commercially valuable, time-sensitive information that
would otherwise be unprotected by law.” Barclays Capital, Inc. v. Theflyonthewall.com,
Nevertheless, the legislative history of the 1976 amendments to the Copyright Act suggested that Congress did not intend to preempt INS-like “hot news” claims. Specifically, the House Report accompanying the amendments provided:
‘Misappropriation’ is not necessarily synonymous with copyright infringement, and thus a cause of action labeled as ‘misappropriation’ is not preempted if it is in fact based neither on a right within the general scope of copyright as specified in section 106 nor on a right equivalent thereto. For example, state law should have the flexibility to afford a remedy (under tradition principles of equity) against a consistent pattern of unauthorized appropriation by a competitor of facts .... constituting ‘hot’ news, whether in the traditional mold of [INS] or in the newer form of data updates from scientific, business, or financial data bases.
H. Rep. No. 94-1476 at 132 (1976), reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5665 (emphasis added).
The next major development in the “hot-news” misappropriation theory was the 1991 Supreme Court decision,
Feist Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., Inc.,
The sine quo non of copyright is originality. To qualify for copyright protection, a work must be original to the author.... Original, as the term is used in copyright, means only that the work was independently created by the author (as opposed to copied from other works), and that it possesses at least some minimal degree of creativity.
Id.
at 345,
While, according to the Court, “[n]o one may claim originality as to facts[,]” ... [f]actual compilations, on the other hand, may possess the requisite originality since “[t]he compilation author typically chooses which facts to include, in what order to place them, and how to arrange the collected data so that they may be used effectively by readers.”
Id.
at 347, 348,
Accordingly, the
Feist
Court explicitly repudiated the notion, espoused by some courts, that facts can be accorded copyright protection based on the “sweat-of-the-brow” theory.
See id.
at 359-60,
Nonetheless, according to the Court, while “the ‘sweat of the brow’ doctrine flout[s] basic copyright principlesf,]” it maintained that “[protection for the fruits of [factual] research ... may in certain circumstances be available under a theory of unfair competition.”
Id.
at 354,
The question of whether a hot-news misappropriation claim survives federal preemption after the 1976 amendments to the Copyright Act and
Feist
was addressed by the Second Circuit in
National Basketball Assoc. v. Motorola, Inc.,
NBA’s complaint asserted,
inter
alia, a copyright infringement claim and a “hot news” misappropriation claim.
Id.
at 844. The district court rejected NBA’s copyright infringement claims with respect to both the underlying basketball games and NBA’s broadcasts of these games.
Id.
Although NBA did not appeal this part of the district court’s decision, the Second Circuit analyzed NBA’s copyright infringement claims because “discussion of the infringement claims [was] necessary to provide the framework for analyzing the viability of the NBA’s state law misappropriation claim in light of the Copyright Act’s preemptive effect.”
Id.
at 845. First, the court rejected NBA’s claim that it could copyright the basketball games themselves because, according to the court, sporting events “do not constitute ‘original works of authorship’ under 17 U.S.C. § 102(a),” and, therefore, “do not fall within the subject matter of federal copyright protection.”
Id.
at 846^17. With respect to the broadcasts, the court cited the “ ‘fact/expression dichotomy’ ” discussed in
Feist
and held that, “[although the broadcasts are protected under copyright law, ... Motorola and STATS did not infringe NBA’s copyright because they reproduced only facts from broadcasts, not the expression or description of the game that constitutes the broadcast.”
Id.
at 847 (quoting
Feist,
After concluding that the material at issue, the scores and statistics of NBA games, were not copyrightable, the court analyzed whether that factual information could be protected under a state-law misappropriation claim.
Id.
at 847-53. Since NBA’s claim was predicated on the “hot news” misappropriation theory set forth in
INS,
the court analyzed whether, and to what extent, such claims survive federal preemption after the 1976 amendments to the Copyright Act.
Id.
Citing the passage of the House Report that accompanied Section 301, the court first concluded that the “hot news” exception should be analyzed as an exception to the general scope prong rather than the subject matter prong.
Id.
at 850.
7
Thus, the court analyzed whether a “hot news” claim could fall outside the general scope prong pursuant to the following standard, which had been set forth in an earlier Second Circuit case:
According to the NBA court, the “elements central to an INS claim” are:
(i) the plaintiff generates or gathers information at some cost or expense ...; (ii) the value of the information is highly time-sensitive ...; (iii) the defendant’s use of the information constitutes free-riding on the plaintiffs costly efforts to generate or collect it ...; (iv) the defendant’s use of the information is in direct competition with a product or service offered by the plaintiff ...; and (v) the ability of other parties to free-ride on the efforts of the plaintiff or others would so reduce the incentive to produce the product or service that its existence or quality would be substantially threatened ....
Id. at 853. The court held that the “extra elements-those in addition to the elements of copyright infringement-that allow a ‘hot-news’ claim to survive preemption are: (i) the time-sensitive value of factual information; (ii) the free-riding by a defendant, and (iii) the threat to the very existence of the product or service provided by the plaintiff.” Id. (emphasis added). Thus, the NBA court appeared to conclude that there are five elements “central to an INS claim,” three of those elements are distinct from a copyright infringement claim, and those three distinct elements provide the requisite “extra elements” that, if present, allow a “hot news” claim to survive preemption. 8 While the court’s five-element test did not expressly limit the “hot news” misappropriation theory to the protection of “factual information,” the court’s three-element test did.
Although the
NBA
test has been cited with approval and adopted outside the Second Circuit,
9
the Fourth Circuit has never applied or discussed it. This court, however, has expressly rejected its application in a case that was similar to the instant case. Specifically, in
Lowry’s Reports, Inc. v. Legg Mason, Inc.,
Free-riding ... may be a pejorative description of copying, but it is still copying.... The other elements do not describe behavior at all. The cost of generating the information, its time-sensitivity, and direct competition between the parties merely define preexisting conditions, the threat to the plaintiffs business merely identifies a consequence of the act of ‘free-riding.’
Id.
(citing Jane C. Ginsburg,
Copyright, Common Law, and Sui Generis Protection of Databases in the United States and Abroad,
66 U. Cin. L.Rev. 151, 162 (1997); Nicholas Khadder, Note,
Nat’l Basketball Ass’n v. Motorola, Inc.,
13 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 3, 14-15 (1998)). Accordingly, the
Lowry’s
court held that the
NBA
test does not “add[ ] or substitute! ] ‘an extra element that changes the nature of the state law action so that it is
qualitatively
different from a copyright infringement claim’ ” and, therefore, the “hot news” misappropriation claim as articulated by the
NBA
court does not fall outside the “general scope requirement” of Section 301.
Id.
at 754-56 (quoting
United States ex rel. Berge v. Bd. of Trs.,
Notwithstanding the Lowry’s court’s rejection of the NBA test, plaintiffs expressly base their “hot news” misappropriation claim on this test. According to plaintiffs’ Complaint:
Each plaintiff generated and collected the information at some significant costs and expense, the value of the information in the Portfolios is highly time-sensitive, defendant’s use of the information constitutes ‘free-riding’ on each plaintiffs costly efforts to generate and collect it, defendant is using the information contained in the Portfolios in direct competition with plaintiffs’ offering of the Portfolios to subscribers, by making it available to them in lieu of subscription to plaintiffs’ publications, and the ability of others to free ride on the efforts of plaintiffs would so reduce the incentive of plaintiffs to produce the product or services that the existence of the Portfolios or their quality would be substantially threatened....
(Compl. ¶ 6.)
Plaintiffs address the
Lowry's
court’s treatment of NBA in their motion for default judgment by contending that the
Lowry’s
court merely expressed “skepticism] of the breadth of the
NBA
formulation.” (Paper No. 10-2 at 5.) Accordingly, plaintiffs attempt to distinguish their case on factual grounds by arguing that defendant Samler’s conduct invokes two elements of the
NBA
test that were not present in
Lowry’s:
(1) that Samler “directly competes” with a product or service offered by plaintiff;” and (2) that Samler’s “free-riding” on plaintiffs’ efforts will so reduce plaintiffs incentive to produce its product that its existence or quality is “substantially threatened.”
{Id.
at 6.) Plaintiffs’ argument is unpersuasive, however, because the
Lowry’s
court did not express “skepticism” of the
NBA
test; it expressly rejected this test. Thus, plain
In any event, even if the court were to apply the NBA test, plaintiffs’ claim would still fail since plaintiffs have not set forth factual allegations in their Complaint or any proof in their subsequent filings from which the court could conclude that the material at issue in this case is “factual information.” Instead, this material appears to be “original” works, which are copyrightable and, therefore, not subject to protection under the NBA court’s formulation of the INS doctrine.
As discussed above, Section 301 of the Copyright Act preempts state causes of action if: (1) the state rights are “equivalent to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright as specified by section 106” ‘
and
(2) the work in which state rights are claimed falls “within the subject matter of copyright.” According to the
NBA
court, the first prong, or the “general scope requirement” prong, is the applicable prong for analyzing whether “hot news” misappropriation claims are preempted.
Copyright law protects material because of its “originality” since the “originality” of work “ ‘promote[s] the Progress of Science and useful Arts.’ ”
Feist,
The conclusion that “hot news” misappropriation claims are limited to claims in which the material at issue is factual information or material that is otherwise not protectable under the Copyright Act is consistent with
INS,
the text of the House Report that accompanied Section 301, and
Feist.
Specifically, in
INS,
the Supreme Court held that “news matter,” information that could not be protected by copyright law because it is factual, could be protected under a misappropriation theory.
This conclusion is also consistent with
NBA.
In
NBA,
the Second Circuit first determined that the material at issue in that case, scores and statistical information of NBA games, was not copyrightable because it was factual information.
This reading of
NBA
is supported by the fact that most courts applying the
NBA
test have only applied it where the material at issue was “factual,” and, therefore, not copyrightable.
See Scranton Times, L.P. v. Wilkes-Barre Publ’g Co.,
No. 3:08-cv-2135,
In light of this conclusion, the court must determine whether the material at issue in the instant suit, plaintiffs’ investment recommendations, constitute “factual information.” Since plaintiffs’ Complaint does not allege that this material is “factual information,” the undersigned directed plaintiffs to provide supplemental briefing on this issue. (Paper No. 15.) In addi
Plaintiffs argue that, while their investment newsletters are copyrightable factual compilations under Feist, the recommendations contained within the newsletters are uncopyrightable facts. (Paper No. 16 at 2-3.) Specifically, according to plaintiffs, while “[t]he textual explanations made by the author, the ordering of the presentation, the formatting and overall structure would all be protectable under Feist[J ... none of this is contained in defendant’s publication.” (Paper No. 16 at 3.) Instead, “[defendant extracts only the ‘facts’ [i.e., the recommendations] and publishes them.” (Id. (alteration in original).) “The actual securities buy or sell recommendations in plaintiffs’ publications are ... uncopyright-protectible ‘facts.’ ” (Id. at 2-3.)
This argument fails because a recommendation to invest in a company is not a fact, but instead an “original” work, which, in plaintiffs’ case, entails “judgment” and “creativity.”
See, e.g., Feist,
According to Julia Cooke Guth, plaintiff Oxford Club’s Executive Director:
Oxford’s investment writers are highly accomplished professionals and are highly compensated by Oxford.... Each [writer] spends full time involved in research related to preparing and writing about investment portfolios.... Oxford also employs assistants to provide background and related information used by the writers....
(Guth Deck, Paper No. 10 Attach. 8 at 5.) Thus, plaintiffs employ their writers to exercise their professional judgment in recommending investments and, upon review of plaintiffs’ filings and publications, it is clear that plaintiffs’ writers do so. (See, e.g., Alexander Green, The Oxford Club Communiqué, Apr. 1, 2010, Paper No. 16 at 15 (analyzing performance of a specific information technology company and recommending that Oxford Club’s readers invest in that company).)
The conclusion that plaintiffs’ writers’ investment recommendations are copyrightable is amply supported by comparing cases in which courts found material to be copyrightable with cases in which courts found material to be uncopyrightable.
Compare Feist,
Accordingly, plaintiffs are seeking to protect an exclusive right to reproduce, distribute, and display their “original” work, i.e., their investment recommendations, and, in turn, protect their writers’ “selectivity,” “creativity,” and “originality.” They are not seeking to protect an exclusive right to profit or otherwise benefit from the labor they expend in generating, gathering, and compiling the “factual information” underlying those recommendations, e.g., the daily performance of one of plaintiffs’ analysts’ recommended stocks. Such an argument would clearly fail since plaintiffs could not seriously argue that they have the exclusive right to publish statistical information regarding the daily performance of a particular stock. While plaintiffs may be able to protect their “original” investment recommendations under federal copyright law, they cannot protect these recommendations under the “hot news” misappropriation theory. 11
In sum, I cannot find that the unchallenged factual allegations in plaintiffs’ Complaint constitute a legitimate cause of action for “hot news” misappropriation and, accordingly, recommend that the court deny plaintiffs motion for default judgment with respect to this claim.
B. Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act
Plaintiffs also assert a claim under Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act. 12 As relevant to this suit, Section 43(a) prohibits the use of any:
word, term, name, symbol, or device or any combination thereof, or any false designation of origin, false or misleading description of fact, or false or misleading representation of fact ... likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive ... as to the origin, sponsorship or approval of [one’s] goods or services, or commercial activities ...
15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1).
“Section 43(a) is a broad federal unfair competition provision which protects unregistered trademarks similar to the way section 32(1) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. 1114(1), protects registered marks.”
Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc.,
According to plaintiffs’ Motion for a Default Judgment, defendant’s website violates Section 43(a) because “[i]t is readily apparent from viewing the TipsTraders.com website that nothing is done to tell readers it is a pirate, and any potential subscriber is likely to think that TipsTraders.com’s possession of the portfolios is authorized, or it is somehow affiliated, connected, approved or sponsored by the producers of the portfolios, exactly as alleged and banned by the statute.” (Paper No. 10-2 at 7.) As an initial matter, plaintiffs’ Complaint contains only minimal discussion of their Section 43(a) claim, as it instead primarily focuses on plaintiffs’ misappropriation claim. Indeed, the only factual allegations that arguably pertain to their Section 43(a) claim are that defendant (1) copies plaintiffs’ portfolios onto his website, and (2) “holds himself out as a legitimate source for the Portfolios.” (Compl. ¶ 5.) Otherwise, plaintiffs’ Complaint simply offers a conclusory recitation of the statute. (Compl. ¶ 10.) Thus, it is unclear from plaintiffs’ Complaint whether defendant’s conduct constitutes a Section 43(a) violation.
It, however, is clear from plaintiffs’ supplemental filings that defendant’s conduct does not violate Section 43(a). As noted in Part I above, defendant’s website provides that “Tipstrader.com is no way affiliated with or endorsed or sponsored by [plaintiffs’ writers] or [plaintiffs], nor do[es] [Tipstraders.com] claim to represent the performance of their publication.” (Paper No. 10 Attach. 3 at 11-18.) Despite this disclaimer, plaintiffs claim that defendant’s website confuses consumers about whether it is affiliated with plaintiffs because the “boilerplate, tiny print disclaimer in defendant’s text is useless in light of the online publication’s presentation of itself as an alternative source for the contents of portfolios prepared by the writers on its list.” (Pis.’ Post-Hearing Supp. Mem. Supp. Mot. Def. J., Paper No. 21 at 3.) Accordingly, plaintiffs request an injunction enjoining defendant from publishing its writers’ recommendations without the following disclaimer in bold letters:
Tipstraders is not authorized by [the plaintiffs’ writers] or their publishers, and, in fact have requested Tipstraders to cease and desist from publishing their recommendations. Moreover, Tipstraders has not obtained those recommendations with the consent of either, and any listed recommendations may contain errors.
(Id. (alteration in original).)
The court rejects plaintiffs’ argument because the disclaimer on defendant’s website satisfies “the central inquiry” of a Section 43(a) confusion of “affiliation” or “sponsorship” claim,
ie.,
that an “appreciable number of ordinarily prudent purchasers” will not “be misled as to the source or sponsorship of the product or service in question.”
Chambers,
Accordingly, I cannot find that plaintiffs’ unchallenged factual allegations constitute a legitimate cause of action under Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act and, therefore, recommend that the court deny this claim as well.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, I recommend that the court DENY plaintiffs’ Motion for a Default Judgment (Paper No. 10).
Any objections to this Report and Recommendation must be served and filed within fourteen (14) days, pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 72(b) and Local Rule 301.5.b.
Notes
. Plaintiffs note that Tipstraders.corn’s lists of recommendations do not accurately depict their analysts’ recommendations. (Guth Decl., Paper No. 10 Attach. 8 at 2.)
. According to plaintiffs, Tipstraders.com is an "aggregator,” or a company that "collect[s] [financial] information from [various] sources and offer[s] it in one place.” (Guth Decl., Paper No. 10 Attach. 8 at 4.) These "aggregators,” according to plaintiffs, "have become common on the internet, and ... are a threat to the existence of traditional investment publishers like plaintiffs, since customers can circumvent paid subscriptions.”
(Id.)
As discussed in detail in a recent opinion by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York,
Barclays Capital, Inc., et al. v. Theflyonthewall.com,
. According to the
GAI Audio court,
"[t]he constituent elements of the misappropriation’ cause of action postulated in the INS case are (1) time, labor, and money spent in the creation of the thing misappropriated, (2) a competitive relationship between plaintiff and defendant and (3) commercial damage to the plaintiff.”
. Section 106 "affords a copyright owner the exclusive right to: (1) reproduce the copyrighted work; (2) prepare derivative works; (3) distribute copies of the work by sale or otherwise; and, with respect to certain artistic works, (4) perform the work publicly; and (5) display the work publicly.”
Rosciszewski v. Arete Assocs., Inc.,
. The first prong is generally referred to as the "general scope requirement” and the second prong is generally referred to as the "subject matter requirement.”
National Basketball Assoc. v. Motorola, Inc.,
. The Court ultimately held that plaintiffs’ telephone directories were not copyrightable because they were not selected, coordinated, or arranged in an original way.
Feist, 499
U.S. at 361-64,
. The district court in
NBA
concluded that NBA’s misappropriation claim was not preempted by the Copyright Act “because, with respect to the underlying games, as opposed to the broadcasts, the subject matter requirement was not met” since sporting events themselves are uncopyrightable.
Id.
at 848. Applying what it “dubbed ... partial preemption,” the district court separately analyzed NBA's misappropriation claims relating to the underlying games and misappropriation claims relating to broadcasts of those games.
Id.
On appeal, the Second Circuit rejected the district court’s "partial preemption” analysis.
Id.
at 848-49. According to the Second Circuit, "[ajlthough game broadcasts are copyrightable while the underlying games are not, the Copyright Act should not be read to distinguish between the two when analyzing the preemption of a misappropriation claim based on copying or taking from the copyrightable work.”
Id.
(citing
ProCD, Inc. v. Zeidenberg,
. The three-element test cited in the text above is from the analysis section of the opinion.
.
See ConFold Pac., Inc. v. Polaris Indus., Inc.,
. If the NBA test is read to apply to "original” works, it would expand the scope of the cause of action articulated by the Court in INS.
. During the May 4th hearing, plaintiffs’ counsel stated that plaintiffs have at times copyrighted their investment publications. Indeed, plaintiffs Agora Financial, LLC and The Taipan Group, LLC obtained an injunction against another aggregator in 2007 for that aggregator's infringement of their copyrights in their investment publications. Agora Financial, LLC, et al. v. Kenneth Marsh, et at. 07-cv-0097 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 23, 2007). Plaintiffs, however, claim that they have not obtained copyrights in the material at issue in this suit because this material is uncopyrightable factual information.
. Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act is codified at 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a).
