Advanced Copyright Law on the Internet

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1

In its order, the court stated that the evidence was fairly clear that the trade secret was
obtained through reverse engineering, and acknowledged that reverse engineering is not
considered “improper means” of obtaining a trade secret under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act.
“The only way in which the reverse engineering could be considered ‘improper means’ herein
would be if whoever did the reverse engineering was subject to the click license agreement
which preconditioned installation of DVD software or hardware, and prohibited reverse
engineering. Plaintiff’s case is problematic at this pre-discovery state. Clearly they have no
direct evidence at this point that [defendant] Jon Johansen did the reverse engineering, and that
he did so after clicking on any licence [sic] agreement.”^1082 Nevertheless, without elaboration,
the court found that the “circumstantial evidence, mostly due to the various defendants’
inclination to boast about their disrespect for the law, is quite compelling on both the issue of
Mr. Johansen’s improper means [and] th[e] Defendants’ knowledge of impropriety.”^1083 The
court found that the harm to the defendants of the injunction would be minimal, while without
the injunction, “the Plaintiff’s right to protect this information as secret will surely be lost, given
the current power of the Internet to disseminate information and the Defendants’ stated
determination to do so.”^1084


The court rejected the defendants’ argument “that trade secret status should be deemed
destroyed at this stage merely by the posting of the trade secret to the Internet. To hold
otherwise would do nothing less than encourage misappropriators of trade secrets to post the
fruits of their wrongdoing on the Internet as quickly as possible and as widely as possible,
thereby destroying a trade secret forever. Such a holding would not be prudent in this age of the
Internet.”^1085 The court refused, however, to extend the injunction to links to other websites
where DeCSS was posted. The court warned that a ban on Internet links would be “overbroad
and burdensome,” calling links “the mainstay of the Internet and indispensable to its convenient
access to the vast world of information. A website owner cannot be held responsible for all of
the content of the sites to which it provides links.”^1086


In November 2001, a California Court of Appeal reversed the injunction on First
Amendment grounds. In DVD Copy Control Assoc. v. Bunner,^1087 the court acknowledged that,
if the trial court correctly concluded that the plaintiffs had established a reasonable probability of
success, a preliminary injunction would be justified in the absence of any free speech concerns.
Nevertheless, the court found that the preliminary injunction could not withstand First
Amendment scrutiny. The court ruled that DeCSS was “speech” within the scope of the First
Amendment because “[r]egardless of who authored the program, DeCSS is a written expression
of the author’s ideas and information about decryption of DVDs without CSS.”^1088 The court


(^1082) Id. at 2.
(^1083) Id. at 2-3.
(^1084) Id. at 3.
(^1085) Id.
(^1086) Id. at 4.
(^1087) 60 U.S.P.Q.2d 1803 (Cal. Ct. App. 2001).
(^1088) Id. at 1809.

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