Facebook sued Power Ventures Inc. in the Northern District of California. The court's ruling addressed a motion to dismiss the copyright, DMCA, trademark, and UCL claims.
Legal standard When a court considers a motion to dismiss, it must take the allegations in the Plaintiff's complaint as true and construe the Complaint in a manner that is favorable to the Plaintiff. Thus, for a motion to dismiss to succeed, the complaint must lack either a cognizable legal theory or sufficient facts to support the legal theory.
Copyright infringement To state a claim for copyright infringement, a plaintiff need only allege • Ownership of a valid copyright and • Copying of original elements of the work. Since Facebook's Terms of Service prohibit scraping (and thus, Facebook has not given any
license to third parties or users to do so), the copying happens without permission.
Ticketmaster LLC v. RMG Techs. Inc. In this particular case, the Court held that
Ticketmaster LLC ("Ticketmaster") was likely to prevail on claims of direct and
contributory copyright infringement as a result of defendant RMG Technologies Inc. ("RMG") distribution of a software application that permitted its clients to circumvent Ticketmaster.com's
CAPTCHA access controls, and use Ticketmaster's copyrighted website in a manner that violated the site's Terms of Use. The Court held that RMG was likely to be found guilty of direct copyright infringement because when RMG viewed the site to create and test its product, it made unauthorized copies of Ticketmaster's site in its computer's RAM. In the instant case, the Court followed
Ticketmaster to determine that Power Ventures' 'scraping' made an actionable "cache" copy of a Facebook profile page each time it accessed a user's profile page. Facebook stated that they were the registered owner of the FACEBOOK mark since 2004. Furthermore, they alleged that Power Ventures used the mark in connection with Power Ventures business. Facebook never authorized or consented to Power Ventures' use of the mark. Facebook also stated that Power Ventures' unauthorized use of the mark was likely to "confuse recipients and lead to the false impression that Facebook is affiliated with, endorses, or sponsors" Power Ventures. Power Ventures countered that Facebook was required to provide concise information in the Complaint with respect to the trademark infringement allegations, including information about each instance of such use. However, since particularized pleading is not required for trademark infringement claims, Facebook's allegations were sufficient to survive Power Ventures' motion to dismiss the trademark infringement claim.
State (California) To state a claim of trademark infringement under California
common law, a plaintiff need only allege • Their prior use of the trademark and • The likelihood of the infringing mark being confused with their mark. For the same reasons listed above, the Court also denied Power Ventures' motion to dismiss the state trademark claim.
Unfair Competition Law California's UCL
jurisprudence had previously found Lanham Act claims to be substantially congruent to UCL claims. However, it was unclear as to whether Facebook was relying on it trade dress claims or if it also intended to incorporate other portions of the FAC, such as those dealing with the CAN-SPAM and CFAA claims. In order to promote an efficient
docket, the Court granted Power Ventures' motion for a more definite statement. ==Ruling==