Online Policy Group v. Diebold
EFF helped protect online speakers by bringing the first s uccessful suit against abusive copyright claims under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). This landmark case set a precedent that allows other Internet users and their ISPs to fight back against improper copyright threats.
In OPG v. Diebold, a California district court has determined that Diebold, Inc., a manufacturer of electronic voting machines, knowingly misrepresented that online commentators, including IndyMedia and two Swarthmore college students, had infringed the company's copyrights. EFF and the Center for Internet and Society Cyberlaw Clinic at Stanford Law School sued on behalf of nonprofit Internet Service Provider (ISP) Online Policy Group (OPG) and the two students to prevent Diebold's abusive copyright claims from silencing public debate about voting.
Diebold sent dozens of cease-and-desist letters to ISPs hosting leaked internal documents revealing flaws in Diebold's e-voting machines. The company claimed copyright violations and used the DMCA to demand that the documents be taken down. One ISP, OPG, refused to remove them in the name of free speech, and thus became the first ISP to test whether it would be held liable for the actions of its users in such a situation.
In his decision, Judge Jeremy Fogel wrote, "No reasonable copyright holder could have believed that the portions of the email archive discussing possible technical problems with Diebold's voting machines were proteced by copyright." In turn, Diebold had violated section 512(f) of the DMCA, which makes it unlawful to use DMCA takedown threats when the copyright holder knows that infringement has not actually occured.
Outcome: In addition to creating the first caselaw applying 512(f) of the DMCA to remedy abusive copyright claims under the DMCA, Diebold subsequently agreed to pay $125,000 in damages and fees.
Documents
- September 30, 2004 Order granting summary judgment[PDF, 252.13 KB]
- February 9, 2004 Transcript from Summary Judgment hearing[TXT, 50.89 KB]
- January 30, 2004 Defendents' Opposition to Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment[PDF, 159.79 KB]
- Plaintiffs' Opposition to Defendents' Motion for Summary Judgment[PDF, 80.49 KB]
- January 12, 2004
Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment[PDF, 186.84 KB]
- Declaration of Sand in Support of Defendants[PDF, 1.53 MB]
- Defendants' Notice of Motion for Summary Judgment[PDF, 60.11 KB]
- Defendants' Proposed Order[PDF, 59.67 KB]
- Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment[PDF, 3.51 MB]
- Declaration of Cohn in Support of Plaintiffs[PDF, 730.45 KB]
- Declaration of Laroia in Support of Plaintiffs[PDF, 982.80 KB]
- Declaration of Pavlosky in Support of Plaintiffs[PDF, 550.28 KB]
- Declaration of Weekly in Support of Plaintiffs[PDF, 934.34 KB]
- December 5, 2003 Diebold's Answer to Complaint[PDF, 92.04 KB]
- December 1, 2003 Scheduling Order Detailing Diebold's Withdrawal of Threats[PDF, 32.72 KB]
- November 24, 2003 Diebold Response to Cohn Letter[PDF, 381.96 KB]
- November 17, 2003 Supplemental Declaration of Benny Ng regarding Diebold's "second notice" to Hurricane Electric[PDF, 861.26 KB]
- November 14, 2003 First Amended Complaint - November 14th Version[PDF, 41.99 KB]
- Plaintiffs' Reply Brief on Preliminary Injunction[PDF, 175.50 KB]
- Amendment to Application for Preliminary Injunction[PDF, 11.62 KB]
- Declaration of Vincent V. Carissimi, Swarthmore College Counsel[PDF, 154.38 KB]
- Proposed Preliminary Injunction Order[PDF, 73.23 KB]
- Second Supplemental Declaration of Luke Thomas Smith[PDF, 391.14 KB]
- November 12, 2003
Diebold's Opposition to Motion for Preliminary Injunction[PDF, 2.12 MB]
- Declaration of Nancy Reeves[PDF, 146.13 KB]
- November 7, 2003
Plaintiffs' Supplemental Brief Supporting Preliminary Injunction[PDF, 906.33 KB]
- Supplemental Declaration of David E. Weekly[PDF, 325.37 KB]
- Supplemental Declaration of Luke Thomas Smith[PDF, 571.15 KB]
- November 4, 2003
Application for Temporary Restraining Order[PDF, 218.48 KB]
- Declaration of Benny Ng, Hurricane Electric[PDF, 2.98 MB]
- Declaration of David E. Weekly, OPG Board Member[PDF, 4.98 MB]
- Declaration of Luke Thomas Smith, Swarthmore Student[PDF, 1.29 MB]
- Declaration of Nelson Chu Pavlosky, Swarthmore Student[PDF, 1.71 MB]
- Declaration of Wendy Seltzer, EFF Staff Attorney[PDF, 3.20 MB]
- Diebold's opposition to TRO[PDF, 784.54 KB]
- Judge Fogel's order, setting expedited hearing schedule for Preliminary Injunction[PDF, 50.32 KB]
- [PDF, 108.90 KB]
- Letter of Cindy Cohn[PDF, 161.42 KB]
Press Releases
- October 15, 2004 Diebold Coughs Up Cash in Copyright Case
- September 30, 2004 EFF Wins in Diebold Copyright Abuse Case
- November 03, 2003 Electronic Frontier Foundation and Stanford Law Clinic Sue Electronic Voting Company
- October 16, 2003 ISP Rejects Diebold Copyright Claims Against News Website
- July 23, 2003 Security Researchers Discover Huge Flaws in E-Voting System
Deeplinks Posts
- October 15, 2008 YouTube Responds to McCain Campaign's Letter
- August 25, 2008 EFF and ACLU of Northern California to ISPs and Content Owners: Do Your Part to Protect Political Speech
Other Resources
- Diebold cease-and-desist letter to OPG
- Black Box Voting Blues[msnbc.com]
- Proposed Temporary Restraining Order
- Transcript from Summary Judgment hearing
- Diebold Withdrawal Letter to Will Doherty of OPG
- (Electronic) Civil Disobedience at Swarthmore[importance.typepad.com]
- Transcript of Preliminary Injunction
- Chilling Effects on the DMCA's safe harbor provisions[chillingeffects.org]
- Congressman Dennis J. Kucinich endorses open design processes for electronic voting machines, and condemns Diebold's coercive copyright claims.[house.gov]
- Latest DMCA Takedown Victim: The Election Process[gripe2ed.com]
- Something Truly Terrifying[workingforchange.com]
- Students Fight E-Vote Firm[wired.com]
- File Sharing Pits Copyright Against Free Speech[nytimes.com]
- EFF's response to Diebold on behalf of OPG[chillingeffects.org]
- Diebold Issues Threat to Publishers of Leaked Memos[siliconvalley.com]
- E-Vote Protest Gains Momentum[wired.com]
- Swarthmore Crackdown on Protesting Students Reaches New Low[importance.typepad.com]

