Advanced Copyright Law on the Internet

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proposition that the bare claim of infringement by a copyright holder does not necessarily give
rise to knowledge of an infringement.”^2458


The court contrasted LoopNet’s situation from the Napster and Fonovisa cases, where the
defendant had actual, specific knowledge of infringements and continued to provide support and
facilities to infringers. “Thus, in order to prove its claim, CoStar needs to establish that the
notice it gave to LoopNet comprised at least constructive knowledge of specific infringing
activity which LoopNet materially contributed to or induced by its alleged failure to halt the
activity. There remain too many material factual disputes for the court to decide on summary
judgment either that such a level of knowledge did or did not exist or that LoopNet’s actions in
trying to stop the infringement were or were not insufficient to the point of comprising
inducement as a matter of law.”^2459 Accordingly, the court denied summary judgment on the
issue of common law contributory liability.^2460


Statutory Damage Award. CoStar elected to take a statutory damages award under
Section 504(c)(1) of the copyright statute, which provides that the copyright owner may elect to
take statutory damages in lieu of actual damages and profits for “all infringements involved in
the action, with respect to any one work ...” The court turned to the issue of what constitutes a
“work” for purposes of statutory damages. LoopNet argued that CoStar was limited to no more
than 13 statutory damages awards because it had only 13 copyright registrations (the
photographs had been registered in groups as compilations). CoStar argued that each of its 348
photographs constituted a separate work and, therefore, it was entitled to 348 separate statutory
damages awards.^2461


The court noted a division of authority over whether the copyright registration is
determinative of the number of works or whether the determinative factor is whether each work
is independently copyrightable. After reviewing the facts of various cases, the court concluded
that the critical fact was “not that CoStar registered multiple photographs on the same
registration form, but whether it registered them as compilations or as individual copyrights.”^2462
The court noted that the language on the registration application under “Nature of Authorship”
on all but the first registration read “revised compilation of database information; some original


(^2458) Id. at 707. The court further observed: “In the analysis of LoopNet’s safe harbor defense to liability, mere
notification of claimed infringement by CoStar was enough to trigger one of two scenarios. Either LoopNet
could comply with the ‘take-down’ provisions of the DMCA and remain in the safe harbor or refuse to remove
the allegedly infringing material and expose itself to the choppier waters of contributory infringement
liability.”Id.
(^2459) Id. at 707-08.
(^2460) LoopNet raised a misuse defense, arguing that CoStar had misused its copyrights in the photographs by
extending them beyond their intended reach to limit its licensees from distributing the entire database, including
data and photographs in which it had no copyright. Id. at 708. The court rejected this defense with relatively
little analysis, distinguishing other copyright misuse cases factually and concluding “there is no allegation or
tying or abuse of copyright serious enough to offend the public policy behind copyright and rise to the level of
misuse.” Id. at 709.
(^2461) Id.
(^2462) Id. at 711.

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