Righthaven Facing Class Action Lawsuit Over Its Sham Copyright Transfer And Lawsuits
from the keep-digging dept
Things keep looking worse and worse for Righthaven. After documents were unsealed that show that the transfer of copyrights from the Las Vegas Journal-Review (and its parent company, Stephens Media) to Righthaven were almost certainly a sham transfer, designed solely to pass along "the right to sue" (which is not a separately transferable right under copyright law), it seemed like Righthaven might finally have to suck it up and realize that its business model might be a disaster. Instead, it's chosen to fight on, even as other courts have publicly raised concerns about the legitimacy of Righthaven's efforts. And while the company has hired a "star" attorney with lots of case experience supporting extreme maximalist copyright positions, Righthaven is facing even more challenges. Buzzfeed.com, one of the sites sued by Righthaven, has now filed a class action counterclaim against Righthaven based on these documents. The idea is to bring together various Righthaven defendants, as a class, and have them all sue Righthaven for its faulty lawsuits. The class action effort claims not only did Buzzfeed not infringe, but that the whole legal effort by Righthaven is an "abuse of process," especially in light of the newly-exposed legal documents. I'm not sure if this kind of class action has much of a chance, really, but it's interesting to watch Righthaven getting beat up repeatedly lately. That's what happens when you try to use a legal loophole as the basis for an entire business model.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: class action, copyright, sham, transfer
Companies: las vegas review journal, righthaven, stephens media
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RICO
I would think that discovery would be very interesting:
1st question would be for a disclosure of every single "settlement" obtained so that those people could also be joined as members of the class.
The 2nd would be for all communications between the various law firms that have been engaged in similar actions - I am sure that would show a pattern of planning.
The 3rd would be for a copy of all documents related to communications with the "licensors" - which would show the extent of the sham because it is a fairly good guess that they did not want to assign the actual "rights" under the copyright act and wanted to limit any assignment to the right to collect.
Next step would be to file a complaint with the bar association that granted the license to the Righthaven attorneys.
I can only hope this pans out.
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