X Corp. v. Center for Countering Digital Hate, INC. Court Filing, retrieved on March 25, 2024 is part of HackerNoonâs Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filing here. This part is 1 of 19.
Sometimes it is unclear what is driving a litigation, and only by reading between the lines of a complaint can one attempt to surmise a plaintiffâs true purpose. Other times, a complaint is so unabashedly and vociferously about one thing that there can be no mistaking that purpose. This case represents the latter circumstance. This case is about punishing the Defendants for their speech.
Plaintiff X Corp., the social media company formerly known as Twitter, has brought suit against Defendants Center for Countering Digital Hate, Inc. (âCCDH U.S.â), Center for Countering Digital Hate Ltd. (âCCDH U.K.â) (together, âCCDHâ), Stichting European Climate Foundation (âECFâ), and Does (collectively, âDefendantsâ), alleging that CCDH undertook âa series of unlawful acts,â one of which involved ECFâs help, âdesigned to improperly gain access to protected X Corp. data.â FAC (dkt. 10) ¶ 1. X Corp. alleges that CCDH then âcherry-pick[ed]â usersâ posts from that data in order to âfalsely claimâ in reports and articles that âit had statistical support showingâ that the X Corp. platform âis overwhelmed with harmful content.â Id. X Corp. insists that CCDH did so in order to push âa contrived narrative to call for companies to stop advertising on
X,â and that CCDH succeeded, causing X Corp. âat least tens of millions of dollarsâ in âlost . . . advertising revenues and other costs.â Id. ¶¶ 2, 5. CCDH moves to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and moves to strike pursuant to Californiaâs anti-SLAPP statute, California Civil Procedure Code § 425.16. MTD&S (dkt. 47).[1] As explained below, the Court GRANTS the motion.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Allegations[2]
1. The Parties
X Corp. is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Nevada, with a principal place of business in San Francisco, California. FAC ¶ 7. X Corp. provides a real-time social media platform (âthe X platformâ) to its users, who can share ideas through public posts. Id. Elon Musk took over Twitter in late October of 2022. See Rob Wile, âA timeline of Elon Muskâs takeover of Twitter,â NBC News (Nov. 17, 2022), nbcnews.com/business/business-news/twitter-elon-musk-timeline-what-happened-so-farrcna57532 (hereinafter Wile Timeline). Twitter changed its name to âXâ in July of 2023. See Irina Ivanova, âTwitter is now X. Hereâs what that means,â CBS News (July 31, 2023), https://www.cbsnews.com/news/twitter-rebrand-x-name-change-elon-musk-what-itmeans/ (adding, ââTwitter was acquired by X Corp both to ensure freedom of speech and as an accelerant for X, the everything app,â the companyâs owner, billionaire Elon Musk, recently said.â).
CCDH U.S. is a non-profit corporation organized under the laws of Washington, D.C., with its principal place of business there as well. Id. ¶ 8. It created an account on the X (then Twitter) platform in 2019. Id. CCDH U.K. is a non-profit organization formed under English law and headquartered in London, England. Id. ¶ 9. CCDH U.S. and CCDH U.K. are affiliated corporate entities. Id. CCDH prepares and publishes reports and articles about organizations and individuals who post on social media platforms âon widely debated topics, included COVID-19 vaccinations, reproductive healthcare, and climate change.â Id. ¶ 17. It then makes those reports âpublicly available and free.â Id. X Corp alleges that CCDHâs reports use âflawed methodologies to advance incorrect, misleading narratives,â cherry-picking data and labeling as âhate speechâ content that does not conform to its views. Id. ¶ 18. X Corp. maintains that âCCDHâs reports and articles, coupled with its demands to entirely remove certain users from platforms, are transparent efforts to censor viewpoints that CCDH disagrees with, and reveal CCDHâs goal of leaving on the platforms only viewpoints that CCDH supports.â Id. ¶ 20. Indeed, X Corp. alleges that CCDH is an âactivist organization[] masquerading as [a] research agenc[y].â Id. ¶ 1.
ECF is a non-profit foundation formed under Dutch law and headquartered in The Hague, Netherlands. Id. ¶ 10.
Doe defendants are âpresently unknown supporters and funders [of CCDH] who have, among other things, directed, instructed, acted as agents of or in concert with, conspired with, and/or who have participated in meaningful ways in CCDHâs and ECFâs unlawful conduct.â Id. ¶ 6. X Corp. alleges that âa United States Senatorâ referred to CCDH as a â[f]oreign dark money group,â and further alleges that X Corp. will further amend the complaint once it ascertains the Doe defendantsâ true names. Id.
2. The Dispute Between the Parties
X Corp. alleges that CCDH has created âfaulty narratives regarding X Corp. and the X service, with the express goal of seeking to harm X Corp.âs business by driving advertisers away from the platform.â Id. ¶ 25. It continues: âTo enable and facilitate those efforts, CCDH has engaged in a series of unlawful acts to secure data regarding X that CCDH could then mischaracterize in its reports and articles alongside calls for companies not to advertise on X.â Id. The dispute between the parties involves two separate means by which CCDH acquired X Corp. data, and three publications in which CCDH made use of that data.
a. CCDH âScrapingâ Data from X Corp. Itself
The first means by which CCDH took X Corp. data involves âscrapingâ data from X Corp. directly.
As a user of the X platform, CCDH necessarily agreed to X Corp.âs Terms of Service (âToSâ) when it created a new account in 2019. Id. ¶¶ 8, 53. The ToS provided that ââscraping the Services without the prior consent of Twitter is expressly prohibited.ââ Id. ¶ 53.[3] The ToS did not define âscraping.â See ToS. However, scraping generally means âextracting data from a website and copying it into a structured format, allowing for data manipulation or analysis.â See hiQ Labs, Inc. v. LinkedIn Corp., 31 F.4th 1180, 1186 n.[4] (9th Cir. 2022) (hereinafter âhiQ 2022 Circuit opinionâ); see also hiQ Labs, Inc. v. LinkedIn Corp., 639 F. Supp. 3d 944, 954 (N.D. Cal. 2022) (hereinafter âhiQ 2022 district opinion) (defining âscrapingâ as âa process of extracting information from a website using automated meansâ).
In its February 9, 2023 report, discussed below, CCDH states: ââ[t]o gather tweets from each of the ten reinstated accounts, [CCDHâs] researchers used the social media webscraping tool SNScrape, which utilizes Twitterâs search function to enable data collection.ââ FAC ¶ 77. X Corp. alleges that CCDH scraped the X platform âon numerous occasions, including before preparing its February 9, 2023 report,â and that X Corp. never gave CCDH permission to do so. Id.
b. CCDH Accessing Data from Brandwatch
The second means by which CCDH took X Corp. data involves a company called Brandwatch. Brandwatch, âa trusted partner of X,â and notably not a defendant in this case, âprovides SaaS products4 that enable its customers to conduct brand monitoring on social media, customer research on opinions and trends, campaign planning and campaign effectiveness measurement, competitive analysis and risk management, influencer identification and market research, and audience segmentation and analysis.â FAC ¶ 28. Brandwatch had contracts with X Corp. and with ECF, both of which are relevant here. Id. ¶¶ 29, 35.
i. Relevant Brandwatch Agreements
X Corp. entered into a contract with Brandwatch on May 1, 2020, called the âMaster License Agreementâ (âthe MLAâ). Id. ¶ 29. Pursuant to the MLA, Brandwatch could access certain data regarding X Corp., referred to as ââLicensed Materials,ââ which included posts on the X platform, in order âto enable Brandwatchâs customers to use its SaaS products to analyze posts and X/Twitter users.â Id. X Corp. would stream its Licensed Materials from its servers, âincluding in California,â to âservers used by Brandwatch [] located in the United States, which Brandwatchâs applications accessed to enable [its] users with login credentials to analyze the data.â Id. In the MLA, Brandwatch agreed that it would âânot attempt to (and will not allow others to): . . . copy, sell, lease, sublicense, distribute, redistribute, syndicate, create derivative works or assign or otherwise transfer or provide access to, in whole or in part, the Licensed Material to any third party.ââ Id. ¶ 31. Brandwatch further agreed to keep âTwitter Contentâ secure. Id.
ECF was a subscriber to Brandwatchâs applications, and therefore also had a series of contracts with Brandwatch. Id. ¶ 35. X Corp. alleges that Brandwatchâs terms of service, to which ECF must have agreed, must be similar to the ones publicly available at https://www.brandwatch.com/legal/terms-and-conditions/. Id. Brandwatch provided ECF with login credentials, which enabled ECF to log into Brandwatchâs applications to access the Licensed Materials. Id. ¶ 36. X alleges that ECFâs agreement with Brandwatch prevented ECF from selling, reselling, licensing, sublicensing, or otherwise making the Brandwatch service âavailable to anybody other than its Usersâ and from distributing âSupplier Data to any non-User for any reason other than Customerâs (or Userâs) business purpose.â Id. ¶ 37. ECF further agreed âthat it would ensure that its user ID and password to use the Brandwatch applications were kept confidentialâ and that it would âânot share Customer Data with any other customer or third parties.ââ Id.[5]
ii. CCDH Access to Brandwatch Using ECF Login
CCDH has never been a customer of Brandwatch. Id. ¶ 39. X Corp. alleges that ECF knew that CCDH was not authorized to access the Licensed Materials or Brandwatch, and knew that CCDH wanted to access the Licensed Materials âto prepare its purported âresearchâ reports and call for censorship and attacks on X Corp.â Id. ¶ 38. X Corp. alleges that âon several occasions since at least early 2021,â ECF agreed to share its Brandwatch login credentials with CCDH âto enable CCDHâs illegal access to the X Corp. data.â Id. CCDH U.K. allegedly instructed CCDH U.S. to secure ECFâs login credentials and helped CCDH U.S. determine how to use Brandwatch applications to search X Corp. data and âhow to mischaracterize that data in the CCDH reports.â Id. CCDH then allegedly âaccessed the Licensed Materials improperly and without authorization.â Id. ¶ 41.
X Corp. further alleges that CCDH knew as of March 2021 that X Corp. and Brandwatch are parties to agreements that âprohibit Brandwatch from allowing third parties to, among other things, access, distribute, create derivative works from, or otherwise transfer the Licensed Materials.â Id. ¶ 42.[6] X Corp. also alleges that âCCDH knew that . . . ECFâs agreement with Brandwatch prohibited ECF from, among other things, sharing its login credentials [or] any of the Licensed Materials with CCDH.â Id. Despite that alleged knowledge, X Corp. alleges, CCDH âinduced and conspired with ECF to provide CCDH U.S. with its login credentials in violation of [X Corp.âs agreements with Brandwatch] and in violation of ECFâs agreement with Brandwatch.â Id. ¶ 43. âCCDH then impermissibly and without authorization accessed the Licensed Materials on several occasions.â Id.
c. CCDHâs Use of the Data
Notwithstanding X Corp.âs claim at the motion hearing that âdata security . . . is what this case is about,â see Tr. of 2/29/24 Hearing (dkt. 74) at 12:11, the complaint does not stop at allegations of CCDHâs allegedly unauthorized access of X Corp. data. It goes on to allege that CCDH âused limited, selective, and incomplete data . . . that CCDH then presented out of context in a false and misleading manner in purported âresearchâ reports and articles.â FAC ¶ 43 (emphasis added). The complaint includes extensive allegations about these publications, which X Corp. contends are based on âflawed âresearchâ methodologies,â and which âpresent an extremely distorted picture of what is actually being discussed and debatedâ on the X platform, in order to âsilenceâ speech with which CCDH disagrees. See id. ¶¶ 17â20. Specifically, X Corp. highlights three publications.
i. March 24, 2021 Report
The first publication, from March 24, 2021, is a report called âThe Disinformation Dozen,â which focused on twelve high-profile individuals who opposed COVID vaccinations. Id. ¶ 21. It is publicly available on CCDHâs website. Id. (citing https://counterhate.com/research/the-disinformation-dozen/). And it asserts that â[j]ust twelve anti-vaxxers are responsible for almost two-thirds of anti-vaccine content circulating on social media platforms.â Id. X Corp. alleges that an unnamed social media platform criticized the report as âcreating a âfaulty narrativeâ without âany evidence.ââ Id. ¶ 22. CCDH states in the March 24, 2021 report that it âcollected this sample using Brandwatch, an enterprise social listening tool, to extract anti-vaccine tweets posted between 1 February and 16 March 2021 based on text analysis.â Id. ¶ 45.
ii. November 10, 2022 Article[7]
The second publication, from November 10, 2022, is an article called âFact check: Muskâs claim about a fall in hate speech doesnât stand [up] to scrutiny.â Id. ¶ 46. It is publicly available on CCDHâs website. Id. (citing https://counterhate.com/blog/factcheck-musks-claim-about-a-fall-in-hate-speech-doesnt-stand-up-to-scrutiny/). And it purports to contradict Elon Muskâs claim that hate speech on the X platform had declined, stating that based on its âanalysis of data from the social media analytics tool Brandwatch,â âthe week in question saw an uptick in the amount of hateful language being tweeted.â See CCDH, âFact checkâ (Nov. 22, 2022) https://counterhate.com/blog/factcheck-musks-claim-about-a-fall-in-hate-speech-doesnt-stand-up-to-scrutiny/). The article specifies that â[d]ata was collected using Brandwatch, which includes original tweets, retweets and quote retweets.â Id.
iii. February 9, 2023 Report
The third publication, from February 9, 2023, is a report called âToxic Twitter,â which concludes that Twitter was generating millions of dollars in advertising revenue from previously banned accounts. See FAC ¶ 49 (citing https://counterhate.com/research/toxic-twitter/); Kaplan Decl. Ex. B (dkt. 48-2) (âToxic Twitterâ report). The report is publicly available on CCDHâs website. Id. It states that Musk âhas reinstated tens of thousands of accounts, including neo-Nazis, white supremacists, misogynists and spreaders of dangerous conspiracy theories,â and that âjust ten reinstated accounts renowned for publishing hateful content and dangerous conspiracies will generate up to $19 million a year in advertising revenue for Twitter.â Toxic Twitter at 3. X Corp. alleges that the report âexpressly calls for companies to stop advertising on X based on its incorrect implications . . . that hate speech viewed on X is on the rise.â FAC ¶ 50.
The Toxic Twitter report involves both types of data collection at issue in the complaint. X Corp. alleges that âto obtain data that it needed for and mischaracterized in its February 9, 2023 report, CCDH again improperly accessed data that X Corp. provided to Brandwatch,â citing âseveral data points for which non-public Brandwatch sources are quoted.â FAC ¶ 51; but see Toxic Twitter at 17 (citing Brandwatch, 22 February 2022, https://www.brandwatch.com/blog/how-much-do-social-media-ads-cost-on-facebookinstagram-twitter-and-linkedin/).[8] X Corp. further alleges that CCDH admits in the February 9, 2023 report that it ââused the social media web-scraping tool SNScrape, which utilizes Twitterâs search function to enable data collection.ââ FAC ¶ 54.
d. Harm to X Corp.
X Corp. alleges that CCDH âwidely disseminates its articles and âresearchâ reports for free,â id. ¶ 65, and that CCDHâs publications âhave attracted attention in the press, with media outlets repeating CCDHâs incorrect assertions that hate speech is increasing on X,â id. ¶ 56. X Corp. alleges that CCDHâs publications have âcaused significant financial harm to X Corp., including via lost advertising revenues.â Id. ¶ 66. Specifically, at least eight âcompanies who advertised on X on an ongoing basis immediately paused spendingâ after viewing CCDHâs publications, and at least five companies âplanning on running future campaignsâ paused those plans after viewing CCDHâs publications. Id. ¶¶ 67â68. Other companies have allegedly identified the CCDH publications as a barrier âto reactivating their paid advertising campaigns on X.â Id. ¶ 69. X Corp. âestimates that it has lost at least tens of millions of dollars in lost revenuesâ as of the date of the amended complaint, âwith those amounts subject to increasing as time goes on.â Id. ¶ 70. It accuses CCDH of being the but-for and proximate cause of its lost revenues, because âCCDHâs conduct to obtain that data (which it then distorted) was necessary for CCDH to make its allegations against X Corp . . . regarding hate speech and other types of content on X.â Id. X Corp. also alleges additional losses of over $5,000 caused by internal investigations to look into CCDHâs unauthorized data access, as well as attorneysâ fees. Id. ¶ 71.
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[1] A second motion, filed by ECF, see ECF Mot. (dkt. 49), is addressed in a separate order.
[2] For the purposes of this motion, this order accepts as true the allegations from the complaint, and construes them in the light most favorable to X Corp. See W. Reserve Oil & Gas Co. v. New, 765 F.2d 1428, 1430 (9th Cir. 1985).
[3] This provision specified that users âmay not . . . access or search or attempt to access or search the Services by any means (automated or otherwise) other than through our currently available, published interfaces that are provided by Twitter (and only pursuant to the applicable terms and conditions), unless you have been specifically allowed to do so in a separate agreement with Twitter (NOTE: crawling the Services is permissible if done in accordance with the provisions of the robots.txt file, however, scraping the Services without the prior consent of Twitter is expressly prohibited).â Kaplan Decl. Ex. A (dkt. 48-1) (âToSâ) at 6â7.
[4] SaaS means âsoftware as a service.â See What is SaaS Business Intelligence?, WiseGeek, http://wisegeek.net/what-is-saas-business-intelligence.htm (last visited 2/3/2024).
[5] CCDH has submitted Brandwatch Service Terms dated October 15, 2022, see Kaplan Decl. Ex. C (dkt. 48-3), Brandwatch Service Terms dated August 8 or 9, 2021, see Kaplan Decl. Ex. D (dkt. 48-4), Brandwatch Service Terms dated April 15, 2019, see Kaplan Decl. Ex. E (dkt. 48-5), and Brandwatch Service Terms dated April 21, 2023, see Kaplan Decl. Ex. F (dkt. 48-6), all of which, it asserts, are incorporated by reference in the Complaint, see Kaplan Decl. ¶¶ 4â7. X Corp. does not seem to dispute that the complaint incorporates these documents.
[6] See also id. ¶ 91 (âDefendants knew, based on their experience in CCDH purporting to analyze data associated with social media platforms . . . that for Brandwatch to have access to X Corp. data for its SaaS products to analyze, X Corp. must have contracts with Brandwatch, and that Brandwatch would be prohibited under the terms of the Brandwatch Agreements from providing access to unauthorized parties, or allowing any unauthorized parties to access that data.â).
[7] The complaint also discusses a November 2, 2021 report called âThe Toxic Ten,â about ten climate-change-denying posters, which it contends is flawed, see id. ¶¶ 23â24; however, the complaint does not discuss that report as one involving improperly accessed data, see id. ¶¶ 39â55 (only discussing the March 24, 2021 report, November 10, 2022 article, and February 9, 2023 reports for this point).
[8] This is the only citation to Brandwatch that the Court observes in the February 9, 2023 report.
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