Copyright Litigation Trends?

If the beginning of 2009 is any indication, there seems to be a couple of new trends in copyright litigation.  The first trend is suits alleging copyright infringement against those who illegally access a copyright owner's website to view copyright content that they don't have permission to view.  Presumably, such illegal access violates the copyright owner's exclusive rights of display and distribution under the Copyright Act.   Examples of these claims can be seen in two cases:

 

  • CoStar Realty Information sued Dumann Realty for copyright infringement in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, alleging that the defendant’s managers illegally accessed the CoStar website by using another customer’s user information to access the site.  Through its website, CoStar provides its clients with real estate information by charging a subscription which costs hundreds of dollars a month.  In the complaint, CoStar argues that, by accessing its website illegally, Dumann’s managers engaged in the illegal distribution of CoStar’s content in violation of the Copyright Act.  Costar is demanding that Dumann pay $150,000 for each instance of infringement.

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