90+ Law & IP Professors sign letter opposing Protect IP Act #copyright #netfreedom

David PostWriting on the Volokh Conspiracy blog on July 4 David Post – author of  In Search of Jefferson’s Moose: Notes on the State of Cyberspace - notes that over 90 Law and IP professors have signed a letter opposing the proposed Protect IP Act.  He says:

The bill, which will allow the government to obtain injunctions against domain names hosting allegedly copyright-infringing or trademark-infringing material, and to have those domain names deleted from the Internet’s databases, represents a serious assault on the fundamental principles that have built the Net — the design principles at the heart of its technical infrastructure, and the free speech principles it has done so much to foster and cultivate around the globe, all at the behest of your friends in the recording and motion picture industries.

The full text of the letter is below

 

Draft – June 27, 2011

Law Professors’ Letter in Opposition to “Preventing Real Online Threats to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property Act of 2011”

(PROTECT-IP Act of 2011, S. 968)

            We, the undersigned law professors who teach and write about intellectual property and Internet law, strongly urge the members of Congress to reject the PROTECT-IP Act (the “Act”).  Although the problems the Act attempts to address – online copyright and trademark infringement – are serious ones presenting new and difficult enforcement challenges, the approach taken in the Act has grave constitutional infirmities, potentially dangerous consequences for the stability and security of the Internet’s addressing system, and will undermine United States foreign policy and strong support of free expression on the Internet around the world.

The Act would allow the government to break the Internet addressing system.  It requires Internet service providers, and operators of Internet name servers, to refuse to recognize Internet domains that a court considers “dedicated to infringing activities.”  But rather than wait until a Web site is actually judged infringing before imposing the equivalent of an Internet death penalty, the Act would allow courts to order any Internet service provider to stop recognizing the site even on a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction issued the same day the complaint is filed.  Courts could issue such an order even if the owner of that domain name was never given notice that a case against it had been filed at all.

The Act goes still further. It requires credit card providers, advertisers, and search engines to refuse to deal with the owners of such sites.  For example, search engines are required to “(i) remove or disable access to the Internet site associated with the domain name set forth in the court order; or (ii) not serve a hypertext link to such Internet site.”  In the case of credit card companies and advertisers, they must stop doing business not only with sites the government has chosen to sue but any site that a private copyright or trademark owner claims is predominantly infringing.  Giving this enormous new power not just to the government but to any copyright and trademark owner would not only disrupt the operations of the allegedly infringing web site without a final judgment of wrongdoing, but would make it extraordinarily difficult for advertisers and credit card companies to do business on the Internet.

Remarkably, the bill applies to domain names outside the United States, even if they are registered not in the .com but, say, the .uk or .fr domains.  It even applies to sites that have no connection with the United States at all, so long as they allegedly “harm holders” of US intellectual property rights.

The proposed Act has three major problems that require its rejection:

1.  Suppressing speech without notice and a proper hearing:  The Supreme Court has made it abundantly clear that governmental action to suppress speech taken prior to “a prompt final judicial decision . . . in an adversary proceeding” that the speech is unlawful is a presumptively unconstitutional “prior restraint,”[1] the “most serious and the least tolerable infringement on First Amendment rights,”[2] permissible only in the narrowest range of circumstances.  The Constitution “require[s] a court, before material is completely removed from circulation, . . . to make a final determination that material is [unlawful] after an adversary hearing.”[3] 

The Act fails this Constitutional test.  It authorizes courts to take websites “out of circulation” – to make them unreachable by and invisible to Internet users in the United States and abroad — immediately upon application by the Attorney General after an ex parte hearing.  No provision is made for any review of a judge’s ex parte determination, let alone for a “prompt and final judicial determination, after an adversary proceeding,” that the website in question contains unlawful material.  This falls far short of what the Constitution requires before speech can be eliminated from public circulation.[4]

2.  Breaking the Internet’s infrastructure:  If the government uses the power to demand that individual Internet service providers make individual, country-specific decisions about who can find what on the Internet, the interconnection principle at the very heart of the Internet is at risk.  The Internet’s Domain Name System (“DNS”) is a foundational building block upon which the Internet has been built and on which its continued functioning critically depends.  The Act will have potentially catastrophic consequences for the stability and security of the DNS.  By authorizing courts to order the removal or replacement of database entries from domain name servers and domain name registries, the Act undermines the principle of domain name universality – that all domain name servers, wherever they may be located on the network, will return the same answer when queried with respect to the Internet address of any specific domain name – on which countless numbers of Internet applications, at present, are based.  Even more troubling, the Act will critically subvert efforts currently underway – and strongly supported by the U.S. government – to build more robust security protections into the DNS protocols; in the words of a number of leading technology experts, several of whom have been intimately involved in the creation and continued evolution of the DNS for decades:

 

The DNS is central to the operation, usability, and scalability of the Internet; almost every other protocol relies on DNS resolution to operate correctly. It is among a handful of protocols that that are the core upon which the Internet is built.  . . . Mandated DNS filtering [as authorized by the Act] would be minimally effective and would present technical challenges that could frustrate important security initiatives.  Additionally, it would promote development of techniques and software that circumvent use of the DNS. These actions would threaten the DNS’s ability to provide universal naming, a primary source of the Internet’s value as a single, unified, global communications network. . . . PROTECT IP’s DNS filtering will be evaded through trivial and often automated changes through easily accessible and installed software plugins. Given this strong potential for evasion, the long-term benefits of using mandated DNS filtering to combat infringement seem modest at best.[5]

 

Moreover, the practical effect of the Act would be to kill innovation by new technology companies in the media space.  Anyone who starts such a company is at risk of having their source of customers and revenue – indeed, their website itself — disappear at a moment’s notice.  The Act’s draconian obligations foisted on Internet service providers, financial services firms, advertisers, and search engines, which will have to consult an ever-growing list of prohibited sites they are not allowed to connect to or do business with, will further hamper the Internet’s operations and effectiveness.

 

3.  Undermining United States’ leadership in supporting and defending free speech and the free exchange of information on the Internet:  The Act represents a retreat from the United States’ strong support of freedom of expression and the free exchange of information and ideas on the Internet.  At a time when many foreign governments have dramatically stepped up their efforts to censor Internet communications,[6] the Act would incorporate into U.S. law – for the first time – a principle more closely associated with those repressive regimes:  a right to insist on the removal of content from the global Internet, regardless of where it may have originated or be located, in service of the exigencies of domestic law.  China, for example, has (justly) been criticized for blocking free access to the Internet with its Great Firewall.  But even China doesn’t demand that search engines outside China refuse to index or link to other Web sites outside China.  The Act does just that.

The United States has been the world’s leader, not just in word but in deed, in codifying these principles of speech and exchange of information.  Requiring Internet service providers, website operators, search engine providers, credit card companies and other financial intermediaries, and Internet advertisers to block access to websites because of their content would constitute a dramatic retreat from the United States’ long-standing policy, implemented in section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, section 512 of the Copyright Act, and elsewhere, of allowing Internet intermediaries to focus on empowering communications by and among users, free from the need to monitor, supervise, or play any other gatekeeping or policing role with respect to those communications.  These laws represent the hallmark of United States leadership in defending speech and their protections are significantly responsible for making the Internet into the revolutionary communications medium that it is today.  They reflect a policy that has not only helped make the United States the world leader in a wide range of Internet-related industries, but it has also enabled the Internet’s uniquely decentralized structure to serve as a global platform for innovation, speech, collaboration, civic engagement, and economic growth.  The Act would undermine that leadership and dramatically diminish the Internet’s capability to be a functioning communications medium.    In conclusion, passage of the Act will compromise our ability to defend the principle of the single global Internet – the Internet that looks the same to, and allows free and unfettered communication between, users located in Boston and Bucharest, free of locally-imposed censorship regimes.   As such, it may represent the biggest threat to the Internet in its history.

While copyright infringement on the Internet is a very real problem, copyright owners already have an ample array of tools at their disposal to deal with the problem.  We shouldn’t add the power to break the Internet to that list.

Signed,

Professor Mark Lemley

William H. Neukom Professor

Stanford Law School

 

Professor David S. Levine

Elon University School of Law

 

Professor David G. Post

Temple University School of Law

 


[1] Freedman v. Maryland, 380 U.S. 51, 58-60 (U.S. 1965) (statute requiring theater owner to receive a license before exhibiting allegedly obscene film was unconstitutional because the statute did not “assure a prompt final judicial decision” that the film was obscene); see also Bantam Books v. Sullivan, 372 U.S. 58 (1962) (State Commission’s letters suggesting removal of books already in circulation is a “prior administrative restraint” and unconstitutional because there was no procedure for “an almost immediate judicial determination of the validity of the restraint”); Fort Wayne Books, Inc. v.  Indiana, 489 U.S. 46, 51-63 (1989) (procedure allowing courts to order pre-trial seizure of allegedly obscene films based upon a finding of probable cause was an unconstitutional prior restraint; publications “may not be taken out of circulation completely until there has been a determination of [unlawful speech] after an adversary hearing.”).  See also Center For Democracy & Technology v. Pappert, 337 F. Supp. 2d 606, 651 (E.D. Pa. 2004) (statute blocking access to particular domain names and IP addresses an unconstitutional prior restraint).

[2] Nebraska Press Ass’n v. Stuart, 427 U.S. 539, 559 (1976).

[3] CDT v. Pappert, 337 F.Supp.2d, at 657 (emphasis added).

[4]The Act would also suppress vast amounts of protected speech containing no infringing content whatsoever, and is unconstitutional on that ground as well.  The current architecture of the Internet permits large numbers of independent individual websites to operate under a single domain name by the use of unique sub-domains; indeed, many web hosting services operate hundreds or thousands of websites under a single domain name (e.g., http://www.aol.com, http://www.terra.es, http://www.blogspot.com).  By requiring suppression of all sub-domains associated with a single offending domain name, the Act “burns down the house to roast the pig,” ACLU v. Reno, 521 U.S. 844, 882 (1997), failing the fundamental requirement imposed by the First Amendment that it implement the “least restrictive means of advancing a compelling state interest.”  ACLU v. Ashcroft, 322 F.3d 240, 251 (3d Cir. 2003) (quoting Sable Commun. v. FCC, 492 U.S. at 126 (emphasis added)); cf. O’Brien, 391 U.S. at 377 (even the lower “intermediate scrutiny” standard requires that any “incidental restriction on First Amendment freedoms . . . be no greater than is essential to the furtherance of that interest”); see also CDT v Pappert, 337 F.Supp.2d, at 649  (domain name blocking [“DNS filtering”] resulted in unconstitutional “overblocking” of protected speech whenever “the method is used to block a web site on an online community or a Web Hosting Service, or a web host that hosts web sites as sub-pages under a single domain name,” and noting that one service provider “blocked hundreds of thousands of web sites unrelated to” the targeted unlawful conduct); see also id., at 640 (statute resulted in blocking fewer than 400 websites containing unlawful child pornography but in excess of one million websites without any unlawful material).

 

[5] Crocker, et al., “Security and Other Technical Concerns Raised by the DNS Filtering Requirements in the PROTECT IP Bill,” available at  http://domainincite.com/docs/PROTECT-IP-Technical-Whitepaper-Final.pdf.  The authors describe in detail how implementation of the Act’s mandatory DNS filtering scheme will conflict with and undermine development of the “DNS Security Extensions,” a “critical set of security updates” for the DNS under development (with the strong support of both the U.S. government and private industry) since the mid-1990s.

 

[6] Secretary of State Clinton, in her “Remarks on Internet Freedom” delivered earlier this year, put it this way:

 

In the last year, we’ve seen a spike in threats to the free flow of information. China, Tunisia, and Uzbekistan have stepped up their censorship of the internet. In Vietnam, access to popular social networking sites has suddenly disappeared. And last Friday in Egypt, 30 bloggers and activists were detained. . . .  As I speak to you today, government censors somewhere are working furiously to erase my words from the records of history. But history itself has already condemned these tactics.

 

[T]he new iconic infrastructure of our age is the Internet. Instead of division, it stands for connection. But even as networks spread to nations around the globe, virtual walls are cropping up in place of visible walls. . . . Some countries have erected electronic barriers that prevent their people from accessing portions of the world’s networks. They’ve expunged words, names, and phrases from search engine results. They have violated the privacy of citizens who engage in non-violent political speech. . . . With the spread of these restrictive practices, a new information curtain is descending across much of the world.