YouTube to give Viacom its video logs
NEW YORK U.S. District Judge Louis L. Stanton authorized full access to
the YouTube logs after Viacom Inc. and other copyright holders
argued that they needed the data to show whether their
copyright-protected videos are more heavily watched than amateur
clips.
The data would not be publicly released but disclosed only to
the plaintiffs, and it would include less specific identifiers than
a user's real name or e-mail address.
Lawyers for Mountain View, Ca.-based Google Inc., which owns
YouTube, said producing 12 terabytes of data -- equivalent to the
text of roughly 12 million books -- would be expensive,
time-consuming and a threat to users' privacy.
The database includes information on when each video gets
played, which can be used to determine how often a clip is viewed.
Attached to each entry is each viewer's unique login ID and the
Internet Protocol, or IP, address for that viewer's computer.
Stanton ruled this week that the plaintiffs had a legitimate
need for the information and that the privacy concerns are
speculative.
Stanton rejected a request from the plaintiffs for Google to
disclose the source code -- the technical secret sauce -- powering
its market-leading search engine, saying there's no evidence Google
manipulated its search algorithms to treat copyright-infringing
videos differently.
The court has yet to rule on Google's requests to question
comedians Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert of Viacom's Comedy
Central.
Viacom is seeking at least $1 billion in damages from Google,
saying YouTube has built a business by using the Internet to
"willfully infringe" copyrights on Viacom shows, which include
Comedy Central's "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" and
Nickelodeon's "SpongeBob SquarePants" cartoon.
The lawsuit was combined with a similar case filed by a British
soccer league and other parties.
Together, the plaintiffs are trying to prove that YouTube has
known of copyright infringement and can do more to stop it, a
finding that could dissolve the immunity protections that service
providers have when they merely host content submitted by their
users.
Though Google said giving the plaintiffs access to YouTube
viewer data would threaten users' privacy, Stanton referred to
Google's own blog entry in which the company argued that the IP
address alone cannot identify a specific individual.
In a statement, Google said it was "disappointed the court
granted Viacom's overreaching demand for viewing history. We are
asking Viacom to respect users' privacy and allow us to anonymize
the logs before producing them under the court's order."
Google did not say whether it would appeal the ruling or seek to
narrow it.
Stanton's ruling made only passing reference to a 1988 federal
law barring the disclosure of specific video materials that
subscribers request or obtain.
Kurt Opsahl, a senior staff attorney with the Electronic
Frontier Foundation, said Stanton should have considered that law
along with constitutional free-speech rights, including a right to
read or view materials anonymously.
He said a user's ID can sometimes include identifying
information such as a first initial and last name.
Viacom said it isn't seeking any user's identity. The company
said any data provided "will be used exclusively for the purpose
of proving our case against YouTube and Google (and) will be
handled subject to a court protective order and in a highly
confidential manner."
This is not the first time Google has fought the disclosure of
user information it had been stockpiling. While gathering evidence
for a case involving online pornography, the U.S. Justice
Department subpoenaed Google and other search engines for lists of
search requests made by their users.
After Google resisted, a federal judge ruled that Google was
obliged to turn over only a sample of Web addresses in its search
index, not the actual search terms requested.