CAPITOL RECORDS, LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability Company, Caroline Records, Inc., a New York Corporation, Virgin Records America, Inc., a California Corporation, EMI Blackwood Music, Inc., a Connecticut Corporation, EMI April Music, Inc., a Connecticut Corporation, EMI Virgin Music, Inc., a New York Corporation, Colgems-EMI Music, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, EMI Virgin Songs, Inc., a New York Corporation, EMI Gold Horizon Music Corp., a New York Corporation, EMI Unart Catalog Inc., a New York Corporation, Stone Diamond Music Corporation, a Michigan Corporation, EMI U Catalog, Inc., a New York Corporation, Jobete Music Co., Inc., a Michigan Corporation, Plaintiffs-Appellees-Cross-Appellants, v. VIMEO, LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability Company, a/k/a Vimeo.com, Connected Ventures, LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability Company, Defendants-Appellants-Cross-Appellees, and Does, 1-20 inclusive, Defendants.
Docket Nos. 14-1048/1049/1067/1068
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
June 16, 2016
As Amended: June 22, 2016
826 F.3d 78
Before: LEVAL, HALL, LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
August Term, 2015. Argued: November 6, 2015.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
Carter G. Phillips, Sidley Austin, LLP, Washington, DC (Russell J. Frackman, Marc E. Mayer, Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp LLP, Los Angeles, CA; Constantine L. Trela, Jr., Sidley Austin LLP, Chicago, IL; Christine Lepera, Jeffrey M. Movit, New York, NY, Kwaku A. Akowuah, Washington, DC on the brief), for Plaintiffs-Appellees-Cross-Appellants.
Matt Schruers, Computer & Communications Industry Association, Washington, DC, for amicus curiae Computer & Communications Industry Association.
Corynne McSherry, Vera Ranieri, Electronic Frontier Foundation, San Francisco, CA; Sherwin Siy, Public Knowledge, Washington, DC; Art Neill, Teri Karobonik, New Media Rights, San Diego, CA; Elizabeth Rosenblatt, Rebecca Tushnet, Organization for Transformative Works, New York, NY, Emma Llansó, Center for Democracy and Technology, Washington, DC, for amicus curiae Electronic Frontier Foundation, Organization for Transformative Works, The Center for Democracy and Technology, Public Knowledge, and New Media Rights.
Michael Elkin, Thomas P. Lane, Winston & Strawn LLP, New York, NY; Robert Turner, Yahoo!, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA;
Brian M. Willen, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, P.C., New York, NY; Sara E. Rowe, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, P.C., Palo Alto, CA, for amici curiae Pinterest, Inc., Tumblr, Inc., and Twitter, Inc.
Thomas G. Hentoff, Jessica S. Richard, Williams & Connolly LLP, Washington, DC, for amici curiae Recording Industry Association of America, Inc., American Association of Independent Music Inc., National Music Publishers Association, Inc., The Harry Fox Agency, Inc., Authors Guild, Inc., Association of American Publishers, American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, Broadcast Music, Inc., American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada, and Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.
Andrew H. Bart, Jenner & Block LLP, New York, NY; Luke C. Platzer, J. Douglas Wilson, Jenner & Block LLP, Washington, DC, for amicus curiae The Copyright Alliance.
Before: LEVAL, HALL, LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
LEVAL, Circuit Judge:
This is an interlocutory appeal on certified questions from rulings of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Abrams, J.). interpreting the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (DMCA). The DMCA establishes a safe harbor in
The district court ruled on motions for partial summary judgment addressed to whether Vimeo was entitled to the DMCA s safe harbor protections. As for videos that allegedly infringed pre-1972 sound recordings, the court ruled in Plaintiffs favor on the theory that
We affirm the district court s rulings in part and vacate in part. (i) On the first question—whether the safe harbor protects service providers from infringement liability under state copyright laws—we conclude it does and accordingly vacate the district court s grant of partial summary judgment to Plaintiffs on this question. (ii) As to whether some viewing by a service provider s employee of a video that plays all or virtually all of a recognizable copyrighted song is sufficient to establish red flag knowledge, disqualifying the service provider from the benefits of the safe harbor, we rule that, under the standard set forth in Viacom International, Inc. v. YouTube, Inc., 676 F.3d 19, 26 (2012), it does not. We therefore remand for reconsideration of the various denials of summary judgment in Vimeo s favor. (iii) On whether Plaintiffs showed a general policy of willful blindness that disqualifies Vimeo from claiming protection of the safe harbor, we agree with the district court s ruling in Vimeo s favor.
BACKGROUND
I. The DMCA
The DMCA was enacted in 1998 to implement the World Intellectual Property Organization Copyright Treaty and to update domestic copyright for the digital age. Viacom, 676 F.3d at 26 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). According to its legislative history, Title II, the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act was designed to clarif[y] the liability faced by service providers who transmit potentially infringing material over their networks, S. Rep. No. 105-190, at 2 (1998), and in the process to ensure[] that the efficiency of the Internet will continue to improve and that the variety and quality of services on the Internet will expand. Id. The Senate Report expressed the view that without clarification of their liability, service providers may hesitate to make the necessary investment in the expansion of the speed and capacity of the Internet. Id. at 8. To that end, the DMCA established four safe harbors, codified at
These portions of the statute undertake, through complex provisions, to establish a compromise, which, on the one hand, augments the protections available to copyright owners, and, on the other, insulates service providers from liability for infringements of which they are unaware, contained in material posted to their sites by users, so as to make it commercially feasible for them to provide valuable Internet services to the public.
The terms summarized above are set forth in the following statutory provisions:
(c)(1) In general.—A service provider shall not be liable for monetary relief, or [with certain exceptions] for injunctive
(A)
(i) does not have actual knowledge that the material or an activity using the material on the system or network is infringing;
(ii) in the absence of such actual knowledge, is not aware of facts or circumstances from which infringing activity is apparent; or
(iii) upon obtaining such knowledge or awareness, acts expeditiously to remove, or disable access to, the material;
(B) does not receive a financial benefit directly attributable to the infringing activity, in a case in which the service provider has the right and ability to control such activity; and
(C) upon notification of claimed infringement as described in paragraph (3), responds expeditiously to remove, or disable access to, the material that is claimed to be infringing or to be the subject of infringing activity.
(m) Protection of privacy.—Nothing in this section shall be construed to condition the applicability of [the safe harbor of
(1) a service provider monitoring its service or affirmatively seeking facts indicating infringing activity, [with exceptions not relevant to this inquiry].
II. Vimeo s Website
Vimeo has had great success as a site for the storage and exhibition of videos. Its Website hosts a wide array of home videos, documentaries, animation, and independent films. Founded in 2005, as of 2012 it hosted more than 31 million videos and had 12.3 million registered users in 49 countries. Approximately 43,000 new videos are uploaded to Vimeo each day. Users post videos onto the website without the intervention or active involvement of Vimeo staff, and Vimeo staff do not watch or prescreen videos before they are made available on the website. When a video is uploaded, it is automatically converted to Vimeo s format and stored on Vimeo s servers. Users can view the videos stored on Vimeo servers through a streaming process by visiting the website, and in many instances can download them.
All Vimeo users must accept its Terms of Service. These require, inter alia, that users upload (1) only videos that they have created or participated in creating, and (2) only videos for which they possess all necessary rights and that do not infringe on any third party rights. Vimeo s Community Guidelines also provide content restrictions and information about its copyright policy. Every time a user uploads a video, the Website displays three rules: (1) I will upload videos I created myself, (2) I will not upload videos intended for commercial use, and (3) I understand that certain types of content are not permitted on Vimeo. Nonetheless, users have the technical ability to upload videos that do not comply with the rules.
Vimeo employs a Community Team of 16 employees to curate content. These employees identify some videos with a like sign, occasionally prepare commentary on a video, offer technical assistance to users, participate in forum discussions, and at times inspect videos suspected of violating Vimeo s policies. So far as we are aware, the record does not indicate that the videos as to which the district court denied
In order to upload a video to the Website, a user must register for a Vimeo account. Vimeo offers two forms of membership accounts—basic (free) and paid subscription services. It derives revenue from user subscription fees and advertising on its website—the vast majority of its revenue coming from subscription sales. Unless the posting user has limited access, any Internet user can view, download, and copy videos posted on the website for free.
A registered user has the ability to note her likes or comment on videos, subscribe to groups of users with common interests, and subscribe to or create channels of videos based on themes.
Vimeo uses multiple computer programs ( Mod Tools ) that assist its Community Team in locating and removing videos that may contain content that violates the Terms of Service. When videos and/or users are identified by one of these tools, Vimeo staff review them individually. Vimeo also enables users to flag videos that they believe violate the Terms of Service. Community Moderators evaluate the flagged content and decide whether or not to remove it. The flagging interface also explains how to submit a DMCA claim.
Between October 2008 and November 2010, Vimeo deleted at least 4,000 videos in response to takedown notices by copyright owners. On the three identified occasions in which Plaintiffs had sent Vimeo takedown notices, the district court found that Vimeo had responded expeditious[ly]. Plaintiffs did not send takedown notices regarding the videos involved in this suit.
While it appears that Vimeo followed a practice of screening the visual content of posted videos for infringement of films, it did not screen the audio portions for infringement of sound recordings. Plaintiffs contend that this fact, together with statements made by Vimeo employees (found in emails), show indifference and willful blindness to infringement of recorded music, and that Vimeo has furthermore actively encouraged users to post infringing videos. Plaintiffs evidence of such statements by Vimeo employees included the following:
- Dalas Verdugo, a Community Director at Vimeo, responded to a user s question that he see[s] all the time at vime[o] videos, (for example Lip-dub) music being used that is copyrighted, is there any problem with this? by telling the user [w]e allow it, however, if the copyright holder sent us a legal takedown notice, we would have to comply.
- Blake Whitman, a member of Vimeo s Community Team, responded to a question regarding Vimeo s policy with copyrighted music used as audio for original video content by telling the user, [d]on t ask, don t tell ;).5
- On another occasion, Whitman responded to a user who asked about using a Radiohead song in a posted video by writing, We can t officially tell you that using copyright music is okay. But....
- Andrea Allen, a member of Vimeo s Community Team, received a message from a user providing a link to a video and stating, I have noticed several people using copyrighted music on Vimeo. What do you do about this? Allen forwarded the e-mail internally with the comment [i]gnoring, but sharing.
In a response to an email asking whether a user would have copyright issues with adding the copyrighted song Don t Worry, Be Happy by Bobby McFerrin as the soundtrack to a home video, Allen responded: The Official answer I must give you is: While we cannot opine specifically on the situation you are referring to, adding a third party s copyrighted content to a video generally (but not always) constitutes copyright infringement under applicable laws ... Off the record answer ... Go ahead and post it.... - In an e-mail sent to Whitman and Verdugo (and also to all@vimeo.com), Andrew Pile, the Vice President of Product and Development at Vimeo, wrote: Who wants to start the felons group, where we just film shitty covers of these [Plaintiff EMI] songs and write FUCK EMI at the end?
III. Proceedings Below
Plaintiffs filed complaints on December 10, 2009, charging Vimeo with direct, contributory, and vicarious copyright infringement. The complaints identified 199 videos that included recordings of music in which Plaintiffs claimed rights. From March 3, 2011, until April 4, 2012, the case was stayed pending our court s decision in Viacom.
In May, 2012, Plaintiffs sought leave to amend their complaints to add more than 1,000 videos to the suit. The Court denied the request without prejudice, on the ground that the additional videos would require reopening of discovery and delay the timely adjudication of the proposed summary judgment motions. Id.
On September 7, 2012, Vimeo moved for summary judgment on the basis of
In a September 18, 2013 order, the district court granted partial summary judgment to Plaintiffs as to videos that allegedly infringed pre-1972 sound recordings. The court granted summary judgment to Vimeo under the safe harbor as to 136 videos on the basis that there was no evidence that Vimeo employees had observed them. As to videos for which there was evidence of some observation by Vimeo employees, the court denied both sides motions, ruling that there were triable issues of fact regarding whether Vimeo had acquired actual or red flag knowledge of infringement that would disqualify it from safe harbor protection. Id.6 The district court rejected Plaintiffs argument that Vimeo should be held liable under a willful blindness theory.
On Vimeo s motion for reconsideration, the district court granted Vimeo summary judgment on an additional 17 videos, on 15 because of insufficient evidence of observation by Vimeo staff, and on two because they contained only short portions of the allegedly infringed recordings, which the court found insufficient to support a finding of red flag knowledge.
The court then certified two questions for interlocutory appeal: (a) Whether the DMCA s safe-harbor provisions are appli-
DISCUSSION
I. Pre-1972 Recordings
The first question we consider is whether the district court erred in granting partial summary judgment to Plaintiffs, rejecting the availability of the DMCA s safe harbor for infringement of sound recordings fixed prior to February 15, 1972. (For convenience, we use the terms pre-1972 and post-1972 to refer to sound recordings fixed before, or after, February 15, 1972.) The district court concluded that, with respect to sound recordings, the safe harbor established by
Confusion on this issue results from Congress s convoluted treatment of sound recordings. Although sound recordings have existed since the 19th century, for reasons not easily understood Congress first included them within the scope of federal copyright protection on February 15, 1972, and the grant of federal copyright protection to sound recordings on that date applied only to sound recordings to be made thereafter. UNITED STATES COPYRIGHT OFFICE, FEDERAL COPYRIGHT PROTECTION FOR PRE-1972 SOUND RECORDINGS 5 (2011), available at http://copyright.gov/docs/sound/pre-72-report.pdf [ Pre-1972 Sound Recordings Report ]. Pre-1972 recordings have never been covered by the federal copyright. Accordingly, copyright protection of pre-1972 sound recordings has depended on the copyright laws of the states. Id.
In 1976, Congress enacted an overall revision of the law of copyright. Section 301 of the new statute, in
On this question, the district court accepted without discussion the position taken by the United States Copyright Office in a report prepared in 2011 that the safe harbor does not protect against liability for infringement of pre-1972 sound recordings. Capitol Records, LLC v. Vimeo LLC, 972 F. Supp. 2d 500, 536-37 (S.D.N.Y. 2013). The portion of the Report directed to
Nonetheless, the Report concluded that
The Pre-1972 Sound Recordings Report arrived at its conclusion that
While we unhesitatingly acknowledge the Copyright Office s superior expertise on the Copyright Act, we cannot accept its reading of
The Report begins its analysis by asserting that
A literal and natural reading of the text of
In contrast, there is every reason to believe that Congress meant exactly what it said. As explained above, what Congress intended in passing
Whether we confine our examination to, the plain meaning of the text, or consider in addition the purpose the text was intended to achieve, we find no reason to doubt that
Nor do we find persuasive force in the Report s reliance on canons of statutory interpretation. The Report argued that interpreting
First, the Report s conception that, under the canon it cited, statutes must be construed in a certain way misconceives what such canons are. They are not rules, but rather suggestive guides. See Chickasaw Nation v. United States, 534 U.S. 84, 94 (2001) (emphasizing that canons are not mandatory rules and that other circumstances evidencing congressional intent can overcome their force ). Such guides are based on commonsense logic and can aid in the interpretation of a legislature s intentions in the face of an ambiguous provision, but only to the extent that the logical propositions on which they are based make sense in the particular circumstance.
Second, the proposition cited by the Report with citation to our Tasini decision was not the proposition we espoused in Tasini. What we said in that case was that reading a statutory exception to a general rule as broadly as appellees suggest would cause the exception to swallow the rule, contravening the principle stated by the Supreme Court in Commissioner v. Clark, 489 U.S. 726, 739 (1989), that when a statute sets forth exceptions to a general rule,
We also disagree with the Report s citation of Tennessee Valley Authority v Hill, 437 U.S. 153, 189 (1978), for the proposition that one section of a statute cannot be interpreted in a manner that implicitly repeals another section. Pre-1972 Sound Recordings Report, at 132. The Report substantially overstated, and misapplied, what the Supreme Court said, which was merely that repeals by implication are not favored. Hill, 437 U.S. at 189 (quoting Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 549 (1974)). The argument rejected by the Supreme Court was that Congress, by repeatedly funding the construction of a dam, had by implication repealed a provision of federal law protecting a wildlife species, the snail darter, whose habitat would be harmed by the operation of the dam. Id. Those circumstances had little in common with this one. Here, to the extent that Congress can be said to have repealed by
Finally, construing the safe harbor of
Although an opinion expressed by the Copyright Office in such a report does not receive Chevron deference of the sort accorded to rulemaking by authorized agencies, we do recognize the Copyright Office s intimate familiarity with the copyright statute and would certainly give appropriate deference to its reasonably persuasive interpretations of the Copyright Act. See Skidmore v Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140 (1944) (explaining that the weight of such an interpretation will depend upon the thoroughness evident in its consideration, the validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier and later pronouncements, and all those facts which give it power to persuade, if lacking power to control ). In this instance, however, for the reasons explained above, we cannot accept its interpretation of
II. Red Flag Knowledge of Infringement
The second certified question is Whether, under Viacom Int l, Inc. v. YouTube, Inc., a service provider s viewing of a user-generated video containing all or virtually all of a recognizable, copyrighted song may establish facts and circumstances giving rise to red flag knowledge of infringement within the meaning of
Our court explained in Viacom that, in order to be disqualified from the benefits of the safe harbor by reason of red flag knowledge under
The difference between actual and red flag knowledge is ... not between specific and generalized knowledge, but instead between a subjective and an objective standard. In other words, the actual knowledge provision turns on whether the provider actually or subjectively knew of specific infringement, while the red flag provision turns on whether the provider was subjectively aware of facts that would have made the specific infringement objectively obvious to a reasonable person.
The hypothetical reasonable person to whom infringement must be obvious is an
A significant aspect of our ruling relates to the burdens of proof on the question of the defendant s entitlement to the safe harbor—particularly with respect to the issue of red flag knowledge. The issue is potentially confusing because of the large numbers of factual questions that can arise in connection with a claim of the safe harbor. A service provider s entitlement to the safe harbor is properly seen as an affirmative defense, and therefore must be raised by the defendant. The defendant undoubtedly bears the burden of raising entitlement to the safe harbor and of demonstrating that it has the status of service provider, as defined, and has taken the steps necessary for eligibility. On the other hand, on the question whether the service provider should be disqualified based on the copyright owner s accusations of misconduct—i.e., by reason of the service provider s failure to act as the statute requires after receiving the copyright owner s notification or otherwise acquiring actual or red flag knowledge—the burden of proof more appropriately shifts to the plaintiff.9 The service provider cannot reasonably be expected to prove broad negatives, providing affidavits of every person who was in its employ during the time the video was on its site, attesting that they did not know of the infringement and did not know of the innumerable facts that might make infringement obvious. And to read the statute as requiring a trial whenever the plaintiff contests the credibility of such attestations would largely destroy the benefit of the safe harbor Congress intended to create.
The Nimmer copyright treatise, noting Congress s failure to prescribe a roadmap, and observing that courts [must] muddle through, furnishes valuable guidance on the shifting allocation of burdens of proof as to a service provider s entitlement to the protection of the safe harbor. See
Acknowledging that the burden lies on the defendant to establish the affirmative defense, Nimmer explains,
It would seem that defendant may do so [establish entitlement to the safe harbor] by demonstrating that it qualifies as a service provider under the statutory definition, which has established a repeat infringer policy and follows the requisite technical measures. In terms of mental state, the burden would then appear to shift back to plaintiff. To disqualify defendant from the safe harbor, the copyright claimant must show defendant s actual knowledge or a red flag waving in its face. But defendant can still qualify for the safe harbor if, after gaining the requisite mental state, it acted expeditiously to disable access to the infringing content. As to that last matter [expeditious take-down], the burden would seem to rest on defendant.
Id. (internal citations omitted)(emphasis added).10
We agree with Nimmer s proposed allocation of shifting burdens of proof. Proper allocation of the burden of proof will necessarily have an important bearing on determining entitlements to summary judgment. Following Nimmer s cogent analysis, it appears that a defendant would, in the first instance, show entitlement to the safe harbor defense by demonstrating its status as a service provider that stores users material on its system, that the allegedly infringing matter was placed on its system by a user, and that it has performed precautionary, protective tasks required by
On the issue of disqualifying knowledge, however, the burden falls on the copyright owner to demonstrate that the service provider acquired knowledge of the infringement, or of facts and circumstances from which infringing activity was obvious, and failed to promptly take down the infringing matter, thus forfeiting its right to the safe harbor. The plaintiff is, of course, entitled to take discovery of the service provider to enable it to make this showing.11
A copyright owner s mere showing that a video posted by a user on the service provider s site includes substantially all of a recording of recognizable copyrighted music, and that an employee of the service provider saw at least some part of the user s material,12 is insufficient to sustain the copyright owner s burden of proving that the service provider had either actual or red flag knowledge of the infringement. That is so for many reasons.
First, the employee s viewing might have been brief. The fact that an employee viewed enough of a video to post a brief comment, add it to a channel (such as kitten videos) or hit the like button, would not show that she had ascertained that its audio track contains all or virtually all of a piece of music.
Second, the insufficiency of some viewing by a service provider s employee to prove the viewer s awareness that a video contains all or virtually all of a song is all the more true in contemplation of the many different business purposes for which the employee might have viewed the video. The purpose of the viewing might include application of technical elements of computer expertise, classification by subject matter, sampling to detect inappropriate obscenity or bigotry, and innumerable other objectives having nothing to do with recognition of infringing music in the soundtrack. Furthermore, the fact that music is recognizable (which, in its dictionary definition of capable of being recognized13 would seem to apply to all music that is original and thus distinguishable from other music), or even famous (which is perhaps what the district court meant by recognizable ), is insufficient to demonstrate that the music was in fact recognized by a hypothetical ordinary individual who has no specialized knowledge of the field of music. Some ordinary people know little or nothing of music. Lovers of one style or category of music may have no familiarity with other categories. For example, 60-year-olds, 40-year-olds, and 20-year-olds, even those who are music lovers, may know and love entirely different bodies of music, so that music intimately familiar to some may be entirely unfamiliar to others.
Furthermore, employees of service providers cannot be assumed to have exper-
It is of course entirely possible that an employee of the service provider who viewed a video did have expertise or knowledge with respect to the market for music and the laws of copyright. The employee may well have known that the work was infringing, or known facts that made this obvious. The copyright owner is entitled to discovery in order to obtain the specific evidence it needs to sustain its burden of showing that the service provider did in fact know of the infringement or of facts that made infringement obvious. But the mere fact that a video contains all or substantially all of a piece of recognizable, or even famous, copyrighted music and was to some extent viewed (or even viewed in its entirety) by some employee of a service provider would be insufficient (without more) to sustain the copyright owner s burden of showing red flag knowledge.
Plaintiff argues that, under this interpretation of the standard for finding red flag knowledge, red flag knowledge is so similar to actual knowledge of infringement as to violate the rule of statutory interpretation that no portion of the statute should be interpreted in a manner that renders it superfluous. This argument has no merit. While the difference between actual knowledge of infringement under
In sum, a showing by plaintiffs of no more than that some employee of Vimeo had some contact with a user-posted video that played all, or nearly all, of a recognizable song is not sufficient to satisfy plaintiffs burden of proof that Vimeo forfeited the safe harbor by reason of red flag knowledge with respect to that video. As it appears that the district court employed that inappropriate standard as the basis for its denial of Vimeo s motion for summary judgment on numerous videos conforming to that description, we vacate
III. Willful Blindness
Our final issue on this appeal involves Plaintiffs contention that the district court, in rejecting their claim of willful blindness, misapplied our teachings in Viacom, which recognized that the willful blindness doctrine may be applied, in appropriate circumstances, to demonstrate knowledge or awareness of specific instances of infringement under the DMCA. Viacom, 676 F.3d at 35. We disagree with Plaintiffs argument and see no reason to disturb the district court s ruling.
Plaintiffs essentially make three arguments. First, based on evidence that Vimeo monitored videos for infringement of visual content but not for infringement of audio content, they argue that they have demonstrated willful blindness to infringement of music, which justifies liability under Viacom. Their second argument is that Vimeo s awareness of facts suggesting a likelihood of infringement gave rise to a duty to investigate further, and that Vimeo s failure to do so showed willful blindness that justifies liability. Finally, they argue that, having encouraged users to post infringing matter, Vimeo could not then close its eyes to the resulting infringements without liability.
The first two arguments are easily disposed of. As we made clear in Viacom,
Their second argument, that awareness of facts suggesting a likelihood of infringement gave rise to a duty to investigate further, does not fare better.
Plaintiffs third argument may fare better in theory, but is not supported by the facts of this case, at least as we understand them. In Viacom, we made clear that actual and red flag knowledge under the DMCA ordinarily must relate to specific infringing material, id. at 30, and that, because willful blindness is a proxy for knowledge, id. at 34-35, it too must relate to specific infringements. Plaintiffs argue, however, that Vimeo, in order to expand its business, actively encouraged users to post videos containing infringing material. They argue that, notwithstanding the formulation in Viacom, a service provider cannot adopt a general policy of urging or encouraging users to post infringing material and then escape liability by hiding behind a disingenuous claim of ignorance of the users infringements.
We need not decide whether Plaintiffs proposed gloss on Viacom is correct as a matter of law. Assuming that it is, Plaintiffs still cannot rely on such a theory in this instance. The evidence cited to us by Plaintiffs, consisting of a handful of sporadic instances (amongst the millions of posted videos) in which Vimeo employees inappropriately encouraged users to post videos that infringed music cannot support a finding of the sort of generalized encouragement of infringement supposed by their legal theory. It therefore cannot suffice to justify stripping Vimeo completely of the protection of
CONCLUSION
We conclude: (1) The safe harbor of
The district court s rulings are accordingly affirmed in part and vacated in part
UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. John G. ROWLAND, Defendant-Appellant.
Docket No. 15-985
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
June 17, 2016
August Term, 2015. Argued: March 18, 2016.
