By , July 25, 2011.

On Friday, a federal judge slashed the verdict awarded  by a jury against illegal downloader Jammie Thomas-Rasset last November.

This decision brings a mix of good news and bad news for copyright owners. It also represents a somewhat striking departure from judicial deference to Congress’s authority to set damages in civil cases by statute.

To put it another way, this decision and last year’s decision against Joel Tenenbaum represent the first time in history that a US court has found a substantive due process limit on damages set by statute. Regardless of how much one agrees with the result of the courts’ decisions, one should appreciate the need for caution when those courts depart dramatically from historical practice and enter new constitutional territory.

Judge Davis, sitting in the District Court of Minnesota, called the $1.5 million verdict for stealing 24 songs “appalling” and reduced it to $54,000 on constitutional grounds. This is similar to last July’s ruling in Sony v. Tenenbaum, where Judge Gertner, in the District Court of Massachusetts, reduced a $675,000 verdict against the college student for downloading and distributing 31 songs on constitutional grounds (though Judge Gertner reached her conclusion using a different standard than Judge Davis used, as explained below). Both parties in Tenenbaum have appealed that decision; that appeal is currently pending in the First Circuit.

The Tale of Thomas-Rasset

This is the second time Judge Davis has reduced a jury award against Thomas-Rasset. The history of Capitol v. Thomas-Rasset 1Although the plaintiffs include six record labels, I’ll be referring to the plaintiff as Capitol to keep things simple. is a bit involved, so it’s worth reviewing it. 2For more background, I highly recommend Ben Sheffner’s posts at Copyrights and Campaigns on the Thomas-Rasset and Tenenbaum lawsuits.

On October 4, 2007, a jury award damages of $222,000, or $9,250 per song. The verdict was vacated after the court held it had erred in one of the jury instructions, and a new trial was set. On June 18, 2009, the jury in the second trial returned an award of $1,920,000 against Thomas-Rasset, $80,000 per song. The court reduced that award under the common-law doctrine of remittitur. Capitol rejected the remitted award and a third trial, solely to determine the amount of damages, was set. 3Under the Seventh Amendment, a plaintiff has the right to reject a remitted award, see Hetzel v. Prince William County, 523 US 208, 211 (1998). This time, the jury awarded $1,500,000 against Thomas-Rasset, or $62,500 a song.

After this judgment, both parties moved to amend the verdict. It’s on this motion that Judge Davis reduced the verdict on constitutional grounds.

The court’s exact holding was that in copyright cases “involving a first-time willful, consumer infringer who committed illegal song file-sharing for her own personal use”, the maximum award that due process allows is three times the statutory minimum, or $2,250 per song.

Before looking at the decision in more detail, I think it’s important to note three things.

First, since this decision come from a district court, it is not binding precedent. Other courts may find Judge Davis’s reasoning persuasive if they are ever faced with a similar case, but no court is required to follow his holding.

Second, whether one agrees or disagrees with the court’s holding, it should be pointed out that this is a very limited holding. It would seem that it doesn’t apply if a defendant was found liable for distributing a copyrighted work rather than just reproducing it. For various reasons, during their end-user litigation campaign, the record labels relied largely on the theory that simply making a copyrighted work available (by using a program like Kazaa that, by default, shares a user’s music files with other users) constitutes distribution. The Minnesota District Court ultimately rejected this theory, so Thomas-Rasset was only found liable for reproduction. Many other courts, however, have adopted the “making available” approach. 4See Peter S. Menell, In Search of Copyright’s Lost Ark: Interpreting the Right to Distribute in the Internet Age (October 08, 2010).

Joel Tenenbaum, by the way, was found liable for distribution after admitting to it at trial.

Finally, I don’t want to minimize concerns about the size of statutory damage awards in copyright cases, especially cases like these. It’s certainly an important policy issue. But the fact remains that this verdict was rendered by a jury and falls within the range set by Congress through law. The question here is not whether one personally thinks the award is too high, but rather whether something in the Constitution limits an award rendered in this manner.

Setting the Standard

The decision in full:

[scribd id=60635512 key=key-1rvopby119r8d3nonrmi mode=list]

Most people would (understandably) assume that a decision like this was made under the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution, which states that excessive fines shall not be imposed. But that’s not the case. A “fine” is a payment “directly imposed by, and payable to, the government.” 5Browning-Ferris Industries of Vt. v. Kelco Disposal, 492 US 257, 268 (1989). A jury award is not a fine since it is imposed by a private plaintiff and payable to that plaintiff.

The basis for this decision is instead the Fifth Amendment, which says “No person shall … be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Due process limits “grossly excessive” damages awards based on notions of “fundamental fairness.” 6TXO Production Corp. v. Alliance Resources Corp., 509 US 443, 454-55 (1993). But note that not everyone is convinced that due process does any such thing. Justice Scalia, in particular, has been consistently skeptical of the Supreme Court’s adoption of a “substantive due process” approach in its punitive damages jurisprudence; see BMW v. Gore, 517 US 559, 598-607 (1996) (Scalia, J., dissenting in judgment); TXO v. Alliance Resources Corp, 509 US 443, 470 (1993) (Scalia, J., concurring in judgment); Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip, 499 US 1, 25-28 (Scalia, J., concurring in judgment).

At the heart of this case and the pending appeal in Sony v. Tenenbaum is which standard should be used to determine the maximum award allowed by due process. In Tenenbaum, the court analyzed the statutory damages award using the standard developed to address excessive awards of punitive damages, specifically BMW of North America v. Gore, 7517 US 559 (1996). Capitol and the government argued, however, that such awards should be analyzed under the far more deferential standard set down in St. Louis, I.M. & S. Ry. Co. v.Williams, which addresses due process limits on damage awards that have been set by statute. 8251 U.S. 63, 67 (1919).

The court sided with Capitol and the government. Punitive damages awards present due process concerns that aren’t present when the amount of damages are set by statute; for example, defendants have notice of their potential liability under statutory damages, while punitive damages theoretically have no upper cap. Leslie Burns notes that this is good news for copyright owners; I imagine it’s not quite as welcome news for Joel Tenenbaum.

Things start to get weird from here, however. Judge Davis begins by stating that Williams “highlighted three factors when analyzing whether the statutory damages award complied with the due process clause: ‘the interests of the public, the numberless opportunities for committing the offense, and the need for securing uniform adherence to established passenger rates.'” He then considers these three factors in the context of this case. However, this consideration seems to be an analysis of the constitutionality of the statute itself, rather than the amount of damages awarded in a particular case. That is, if Judge Davis found these factors weren’t present here, would that mean due process never allows statutory damages in copyright infringement cases?

Nevertheless, the court did find these factors supported an award of statutory damages, and his analysis is very favorable to copyright owners. For the first factor, the court remarked that “There is a significant public interest in vindicating copyright. In fact, ‘the primary object in conferring the monopoly lie[s] in the general benefits derived by the public from the labors of authors.'” There are numberless opportunities for infringing copyright through P2P networks since it is “easy, costless, and quick.” Finally, the need for deterrence is high. Said Judge Davis, “Online infringement is easy to complete; it causes real damage to the copyright holders, and, thereby injures the public by leading to a decrease in the incentive to create artistic works; and it is widespread.”

“Obviously” — You keep using that word…

The court did not think, however, that an award of $1,500,000 for stealing 24 songs was appropriate under the due process clause. It cites only two reasons for its conclusion: (1) Thomas-Rasset is an individual and not a business and infringed for personal use rather than commercial gain; and (2) the statutory damages award is too far away from the actual damages suffered by Capitol. The court may be correct as a matter of policy, but this seems rather flimsy reasoning for saying the damages award is prohibited by the Constitution.

I’m not alone in thinking the court was on shaky ground arriving at this conclusion. Attorney Christopher Harrison notes:

Judge Davis’ entire constitutional due process analysis appears to boil down to, “I personally think this is too high an award.”  There is no further legal support to his position.  In fact, later in the opinion he states “The Court accords deference to the jury’s verdict. Yet an award of $1.5 million for stealing and distributing 24 songs for personal use is appalling. Such an award against an individual consumer, of limited means, acting with no attempt to profit, is so severe and oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the offense and obviously unreasonable.”

But the jury’s verdict is quite clearly not obviously unreasonable.  As noted above, the three juries in this case awarded damages of $9,250, $80,000, and $62,500 per song.  The jury in Tenenbaum awarded $22,500 per song.  While that range is pretty wide, the juries have awarded between 4 and 35 times as much as both Judge Davis and Judge Gertner find “obviously unreasonable.”

Indeed, I think you can present more legal support that the court misapplied the Williams standard rather than applying it correctly. For starters, reducing an award of statutory damages is extremely rare — while courts since Williams have stated that due process places a limit on statutory damages, they almost always uphold verdicts. I’ve only been able to come across one previous case where an award hasn’t been upheld.

In Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Danaher, the Supreme Court struck down a damages award against a telephone company on due process grounds in part because it found the company had been acting reasonably. 9238 US 482 (1915). The Court noted, “There was no intentional wrongdoing; no departure from any prescribed or known standard of action, and no reckless conduct.” None of those hold true in this case.

The District Court of Minnesota has broken new ground and entered terra incognita in due process jurisprudence with this decision. It’s difficult to see how a jury award for a willful violation of a law, within the range of damages that Congress has provided by statute, is so “obviously unreasonable” to be unconstitutional.

What happens now? Either side can appeal this decision to the Eighth Circuit Court. This would put appeals in two separate circuit courts on the issue of due process limitations on statutory damages in file-sharing cases. No word yet on whether this will happen.

References

References
1 Although the plaintiffs include six record labels, I’ll be referring to the plaintiff as Capitol to keep things simple.
2 For more background, I highly recommend Ben Sheffner’s posts at Copyrights and Campaigns on the Thomas-Rasset and Tenenbaum lawsuits.
3 Under the Seventh Amendment, a plaintiff has the right to reject a remitted award, see Hetzel v. Prince William County, 523 US 208, 211 (1998).
4 See Peter S. Menell, In Search of Copyright’s Lost Ark: Interpreting the Right to Distribute in the Internet Age (October 08, 2010).
5 Browning-Ferris Industries of Vt. v. Kelco Disposal, 492 US 257, 268 (1989).
6 TXO Production Corp. v. Alliance Resources Corp., 509 US 443, 454-55 (1993). But note that not everyone is convinced that due process does any such thing. Justice Scalia, in particular, has been consistently skeptical of the Supreme Court’s adoption of a “substantive due process” approach in its punitive damages jurisprudence; see BMW v. Gore, 517 US 559, 598-607 (1996) (Scalia, J., dissenting in judgment); TXO v. Alliance Resources Corp, 509 US 443, 470 (1993) (Scalia, J., concurring in judgment); Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip, 499 US 1, 25-28 (Scalia, J., concurring in judgment).
7 517 US 559 (1996).
8 251 U.S. 63, 67 (1919).
9 238 US 482 (1915).
By , April 21, 2011.

Stories of heroic legal battles, typically involving underdogs fighting against all odds for truth and justice, are popular fodder for books and films.

Gideon’s Trumpet tells the tale of a poor, uneducated man, in and out of jail most of his life, who doggedly pushes his latest conviction all the way to the Supreme Court and wins — in turn, setting the precedent that the Constitutional right to an attorney applies in State courts.

The Buffalo Creek Disaster recounts the aftermath of a devastating coal mining disaster that wiped out a West Virginia town and the efforts of a group of attorneys to hold the mining company responsible for failing to prevent the bursting of the dam.

The film Erin Brockovich portrays the tale of a single mother without a formal legal education who launched a successful fight against a large utility company alleged to be contaminating groundwater and sickening the local population, leading to the largest settlement paid in a direct action lawsuit in US history. 1According to Wikipedia.

Perhaps Joel Tenenbaum and his legal team are hoping one day to have their legal battle memoralized in a similar story. Regarding Tenenbaum’s appeal of the $675,000 — $22,500 per song for 30 songs — awarded as damages for copyright infringement, one of the law students working on the case expressed “real hope for Joel, for justice, and for rationality.”

Justice, it seems, must save college students from the tyranny of having to pay 99 cents to own a song.

Don’t get me wrong, $675,000 is a lot of money, and Tenenbaum was one of the unlucky quarter of 1/10 of one percent of illegal filesharers to be sued by the record labels between 2003 and 2008, 2This is a back-of-the-envelope calculation, derived from InternetWorldStats number of US internet users in 2005, Interpret’s percentage of internet users who have downloaded illegally, and record label court filings indicating the number of named defendants contacted during the litigation campaign. and of those, one of only 2 out of 18,000 defendants to have gotten a jury award of statutory damages against him.

But is $675,000 an unconstitutional amount to be awarded against an individual who has engaged in P2P infringement? That is the question currently facing the First Circuit.

On July 9, 2010, Judge Gertner reduced the jury’s award of $675,000 to $67,500 on constitutional grounds in Sony BMG Music Entertainment v. Tenenbaum. 3721 F.Supp.2d 85 (D. Mass). This is in contrast to the reduction of the jury award in the Jammie Thomas case, which was made under the common law procedure of remittitur 4Capitol Records v. Thomas-Rasset, 680 F.Supp.2d 1045 (D. Minn 2010). — and, in fact, Judge Gertner relied in part on the fact that the plaintiffs in Thomas-Rasset had rejected the remitted award to support her conclusion that the constitutional question in Tenenbaum could not be avoided. 5As Gertner observed, it is a generally accepted principle that courts should “avoid confronting constitutional questions when they can reasonably rest their holdings on other grounds.”

Both parties appealed the decision to the First Circuit, joined by the United States as plaintiff-intervenor. You can read the appellate briefs here.

Oral arguments were held April 4, you can listen to them here:

[wpaudio url=”http://www.ca1.uscourts.gov/files/audio/10-1883.mp3″ text=”Oral arguments – Sony BMG Music Entertainment v. Tenenbaum” dl=”0″]

Several bloggers attended the oral arguments in person and have written up their accounts: these include Joel Sage at Legally Sociable and Steven Ayr at AyrLaw.

Background

There is a wealth of information online that explores the issues involved in this appeal.

Just yesterday, the NYU IP and Entertainment Law Ledger published What are the Constitutional Limits on Awards of Statutory Damages? by Andrew Berger, which examines the Tenenbaum appeal and its legal issues in depth.

First up is an excellent debate between Ben Sheffner and Pamela Samuelson about whether statutory damages in P2P cases are unconstitutionally large at PENNumbra.

Also from Sheffner, check out Due Process Limits on Statutory Civil Damages? Unprecedented Ruling in Copyright Case a Double-edged Sword for Businesses, published by the Washington Legal Foundation.

The Intellectual Property Colloquium has a podcast available on the same subject. UCLA professor Doug Lichtman hosts the thorough examination of many of the issues raised in Tenenbaum’s case with guests that include Tenenbaum’s attorney Charles Nesson, general counsel for the RIAA Steven Marks, and several academic experts on punitive damages.

The Progress & Freedom Foundation hosts The ‘Lessigation’ of Copyright Scholarship: A Review of Statutory Damages in Copyright Law: A Remedy in Need of Reform, which provides an overview of the history and purpose of copyright’s statutory damages.

Finally, Copygrounds has a post written by Matthew Oppenheim explaining the role of statutory damages in P2P cases from the record labels’ perspective that’s worth a read.

Issues at Stake

The key issue in the Tenenbaum appeal is whether the Due Process Clause of the Constitution can limit the amount of damages awarded by a jury under copyright’s statutory damages provision — and if it can, how is that determined?

The lower court noted that due process “prevents the awarding of damages without adequate procedural protections, but it also seeks to define the outer limits of what excessive punishment is,” noting also that it has both a procedural and a substantive component.

Judge Gertner concluded that the damages were unconstitutional using the analysis from BMW of North America v. Gore. 6517 US 559 (1996). There, the Supreme Court set out three guideposts for determining whether an award of punitive damages runs afoul of the Due Process Clause: (1) “the degree of reprehensibility of” the defendant’s acts, (2) “the disparity between the harm or potential harm suffered by [the plaintiff and the] punitive damages award”, and (3) “the difference between this remedy and the civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases.”

The record labels and government disagree with Gertner’s choice of standard. They argue that the damages should be analyzed under the more deferential standard of St. Louis v. Williams 7251 US 63 (1919). because, unlike the punitive damages involved in Gore, statutory damages are set by law. The Court in Williams was tasked with determining whether a penalty set by statute violated the Due Process Clause. It concluded that governments “possess a wide latitude of discretion” in setting statutory penalties, and the limitations of the Due Process Clause only come into play when a penalty is “so severe and oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the offense and obviously unreasonable.”

Due process certainly plays a role in punitive damages awards. Since the amount of such an award is not set by law, potential defendant’s have no notice of the amount of liability they may face in the course of their business, the amounts awarded by different juries for similar cases may vary so greatly as to be unfair, and juries may award damages that are simply unreasonable in light of the harm caused.

These due process concerns are attenuated when the amount of damages, even a range of damages available as in copyright infringement, is set by Congress rather than left to the discretion of a jury. Potential defendants have a sense of what their maximum liability can be — and given the FBI warnings on every DVD, it’s fair to say that statutory damages for copyright are one of the most well-known federal statutes concerning damages. The range of damages may be broad, but they are confined. And Congress presumably considers the reasonableness of the damages in light of the range of behaviors that would trigger an award.

The record labels, along with Sheffner and Berger, point out that the Gore guideposts are inapt for testing the constitutionality of statutory damages for these reasons.

What’s more, the issue of whether the award is unreasonable or unfair has to be viewed in light of the fact that it is roughly half the average of every jury award of statutory damages in P2P infringement cases that reached a jury verdict. 8Tenenbaum’s liability of $675,000 for 30 songs comes out to $22,500/song. The award in Jammie Thomas’s first civil trial was $9,250/song, in her second $80,000/song, and in the third trial, which concerned the amount of damages only, the jury awarded $62,500/song. All four juries that considered these cases, seeing the evidence with their own eyes and hearing the testimony for themselves, and weighing the amount of damages to award in light of the circumstances, have found it appropriate to hold P2P infringers liable for an average of $43,662.50 a song. The argument is essentially that each and every jury has acted unreasonably and unfairly.

Of course, both sides argue that it doesn’t matter which standard is applied. According to the record labels, the damages award is constitutional under both Gore and Williams; Tenenbaum argues it is unconstitutional under either.

If the First Circuit reaches the Due Process issue, much of the conclusion may rest on what measure of the harm caused by Tenenbaum is accepted. Were his actions, as Judge Gertner held, similar to the theft of a small number of individual songs? In that case, the harm would be relatively small — $21 by Gertner’s calculations. Or are his actions more like those of an unrestricted licensee of the songs at issue — meaning the potential harm caused approaches the entire value of the copyrighted work.

It’s also likely that the court will have to take a look at whether or not Congress intended for the statutory damages provision to apply to the type of conduct Tenenbaum engaged in, though even here, both sides disagree over how to characterize his conduct. Is it simply personal, noncommercial copying, or is it “easy and ubiquitous” infringement that harms copyright holders on a scale beyond even large-scale commercial physical piracy? Whichever view the court takes will play a role in determining the reasonableness of the damages award.

A Broad Attack on Statutory Damages

All the parties raise other issues besides Due Process in their appellate briefs. Most notably, Tenenbaum raises two issues attacking the very validity of copyright’s statutory damage provision.

Tenenbaum first argues that statutory damages were “never intended for consumer copying,” relying primarily on legislative history to reach this conclusion. Commenting at Legally Sociable, one of the members of Tenenbaum’s legal team expressed dismay that First Circuit Chief Judge Lynch expressed “hostility” toward this point during oral arguments and intends to “elevate textualism over Congressional intent and rationality.”

But, with all due respect to Tenenbaum’s legal team, this seems to conflate textualism, a theory of statutory interpretation, with textual rules of statutory construction — specifically, the plain meaning rule.

Statutory interpretation, under any theory, is used by courts when the plain meaning of a statute can’t be determined. Perhaps a term or phrase is ambiguous, or perhaps the language of the statute can be taken more than one way. In these situations, courts need to look at other things to determine what the law means, like the intent of its drafters or the underlying goals of the statute.

But if the meaning of the statute is plain on its face, there is typically no need for further interpretation. 9US v. Ron Pair Enterprises, 489 US 235 (1989). Presumably, Congress intended the law to mean what it wrote it to say.

And I think the language of the statutory damage provision of the Copyright Act is quite clear. Statutory damages apply to any “infringer of copyright.” 1017 USC § 504(a). An “infringer of copyright” is “anyone who violates any of the exclusive rights of the copyright owner.” (Emphasis added). 1117 USC § 501(a). In contrast, other provisions expressly take commercial use into consideration: for example, fair use (“In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include—(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes”) 1217 USC § 107. and criminal copyright infringement (“Any person who willfully infringes a copyright shall be punished as provided under section 2319 of title 18, if the infringement was committed—(A) for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain”). 1317 USC § 506(a). There’s simply nothing in the language of the Copyright Act that supports a commercial/noncommercial distinction for awards of statutory damages.

Tenenbaum’s second argument asserts that the Supreme Court declared the current statutory damages provision unconstitutional in Feltner v. Columbia Pictures Television. 14523 US 340 (1998). It’s a creative argument, and one Feltner himself made after his case was remanded from the Supreme Court. 15Columbia Pictures v. Krypton Broadcasting, 259 F.3d 1186, 1192-93 (9th Cir. 2001). The 9th Circuit rejected this argument as unpersuasive, a position “contrary to the express language of the Supreme Court’s decision” and one based on a failed understanding of the holding in that case. Nevertheless, Tenenbaum hopes to convince the First Circuit that the 9th Circuit was mistaken.

Implications

It’s unclear what effect an affirmance by the First Circuit would have on P2P litigation specifically. The record labels are no longer pursuing lawsuits against individual infringers; only one other case has reached the jury stage. And while other copyright holders have notably tried the strategy of suing end-users in the past year, I have doubts that this is an effective strategy from a financial standpoint. Individual copyright holders don’t have the resources that an industry group has to sustain mass lawsuits through the trial stage, these lawsuits are already facing procedural setbacks, and at the end of the day, judgments, whether thousands of dollars or hundreds of thousands of dollars, are difficult to collect — especially from individuals. They just don’t have the money. In other words, litigation of end users as a “business model” is, I think, unlikely to be sustainable no matter if there are limitations on statutory damages or not.

But the effect of an affirmance will have an effect on lawsuits outside this specific arena, and that effect will be felt most by smaller copyright holders. Andrew Berger writes:

Affirming the result in Tenenbaum will negatively impact copyright enforcement for years to come for a number of reasons.

First, affirmance will cause many meritorious copyright claims never to be litigated. That is because Tenenbaum, contrary to the Copyright Act, requires copyright owners to prove actual damage as a pre-condition to recovering statutory damages. But many copyright holders will be unable to show actual damages. The value of a copyright, especially at inception, is often impossible to estimate. How much is an unpublished novel by a first-time author worth?

Second, removing the teeth from the statutory damage scheme, which is what Judge Gertner essentially did, relegates litigants to actual damages. But they are often inadequate for a number of reasons. First, actual damages may be less than the cost of detecting, investigation and, for sure, litigating. So why bother? Second, actual damages, often requiring extensive accounting analysis, may be prohibitively expensive to prove. Third, although actual damages in copyright litigation include the infringer’s profits attributable to the infringement, there may be none to collect either because an infringer earned none, conveniently lost its sales records or never kept any.

 

References

References
1 According to Wikipedia.
2 This is a back-of-the-envelope calculation, derived from InternetWorldStats number of US internet users in 2005, Interpret’s percentage of internet users who have downloaded illegally, and record label court filings indicating the number of named defendants contacted during the litigation campaign.
3 721 F.Supp.2d 85 (D. Mass).
4 Capitol Records v. Thomas-Rasset, 680 F.Supp.2d 1045 (D. Minn 2010).
5 As Gertner observed, it is a generally accepted principle that courts should “avoid confronting constitutional questions when they can reasonably rest their holdings on other grounds.”
6 517 US 559 (1996).
7 251 US 63 (1919).
8 Tenenbaum’s liability of $675,000 for 30 songs comes out to $22,500/song. The award in Jammie Thomas’s first civil trial was $9,250/song, in her second $80,000/song, and in the third trial, which concerned the amount of damages only, the jury awarded $62,500/song.
9 US v. Ron Pair Enterprises, 489 US 235 (1989).
10 17 USC § 504(a).
11 17 USC § 501(a).
12 17 USC § 107.
13 17 USC § 506(a).
14 523 US 340 (1998).
15 Columbia Pictures v. Krypton Broadcasting, 259 F.3d 1186, 1192-93 (9th Cir. 2001).