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Tech, Library Stakeholders Urge 9th Circuit Rehearing of Mavrix v. LiveJournal DMCA Case

A coalition of top tech sector stakeholders and a separate coalition of library and public interest groups are urging the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to either rehear Mavrix Photographs v. LiveJournal or set an en banc hearing. A three-judge 9th Circuit panel ruled last month against LiveJournal, saying moderators of the website's “Oh No They Didn’t!” gossip blog can be considered to have enough knowledge of copyright infringement contained in blog posts to undermine Digital Millennium Copyright Act Section 512 safe harbors (see 1704100040). Facebook, Google, the Computer & Communications Industry Association, the Internet Association and other tech interests jointly urged 9th Circuit reconsideration of Mavrix, arguing in an amicus brief that the panel's ruling deviated from Section 512's language and legislative history. The original ruling, if allowed to stand, would “make it more difficult for LiveJournal (and other service providers) to ensure that their operations are protected” under Section 512, the tech entities said. “The panel’s decision threatens to expose online services to a possible loss of DMCA protection simply because they make efforts to screen content that users submit for posting. If the panel intended that result, its decision is profoundly mistaken, and it will harm not just service providers and their users, but copyright owners as well.” The ruling “runs directly contrary” to Congress' intent in enacting Section 512 “by penalizing service providers who use moderators,” said (in Pacer) the American Library Association, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge and others. “The possibility that an online platform might lose its DMCA safe harbor by virtue of moderating its service obviously would strongly discourage the platform from doing so. That, in turn, would upend the actual practices of scores of platforms and services who have responded to Congress’s clear signal that they would not be penalized for using moderators.”