The New York Times Company v. OpenAI Update Court Filing, retrieved on February 26, 2024 is part of HackerNoonâs Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filingÂ
D. The âMisappropriationâ Claim Is Preempted by the Copyright Act
Count VI, for âmisappropriationâ under New York law, appears to raise two distinct theories. The first suggests that OpenAI engages in âunfair competitionâ by using âTimes content to train models that produce informative text of the same general type and kind that [t]he Times produces.â Compl. ¶ 195 (the âText Claimâ). The second suggests that OpenAI harms the Times because ChatGPT can respond to user queries about Wirecutter recommendations. Id. ¶ 194 (the âRecommendations Claimâ). Both are preempted by the Copyright Act. 17 U.S.C. § 301(a).
1. The Text Claim Fails
The Text Claim is preempted by Section 301 of the Copyright Act, which âoust[s] the states from imposing any control of the areaâ governed by federal copyright law. In re Jackson, 972 F.3d 25, 42 (2d Cir. 2020). Preemption applies if two conditions are met: (1) the claim relates to âworks of authorship . . . within [copyrightâs] subject matterâ (âsubject matterâ condition); and (2) the rights asserted are âequivalent to any of the exclusive rights within [copyrightâs] general scopeâ (âgeneral scopeâ condition). 17 U.S.C. § 301(a). Here, the subject matter condition is satisfied because the claim is based on OpenAIâs use of (1) Times articles, which are âliterary works,â 17 U.S.C. § 102(a), and (2) facts from those articles which, while unprotectable, fall âwithin the subject matter of copyright for the purposes of [] preemption,â Barclays Capital Inc. v. Theflyonthewall.com, Inc., 650 F.3d 876, 893 (2d Cir. 2011). And the general scope condition is satisfied because the rights asserted are not âqualitatively different from a copyright [] claim.â In re Jackson, 972 F.3d at 43â44. One aspect of the Text Claim is based on the use of content to âtrain models,â Compl. ¶ 195, which is one of the stated bases of the copyright claim, id. ¶¶ 64, 161â62. The other is based on outputs that are âthe same or similar to content published by [t]he Times,â id. ¶ 194â95, which is the other stated basis of the copyright claim, see id. ¶ 163. Because the Text Claim is based on the same allegations as the copyright claims, the claim is preempted.[47]
2. The Recommendations Claim Fails
The Recommendations Claim focuses on Wirecutter, a Times-owned website that publishes articles to guide readers through difficult purchase decisions. See, e.g., Compl. ¶¶ 130, 134. Wirecutter makes âthe vast majority of its revenueâ through âcommission[s],â which it earns when users click âaffiliate linksâ in its articles and purchase a product. Id. ¶¶ 128â29. According to the Times, by complying with requests to identify Wirecutter-recommended products, ChatGPT reduces the need for users to âvisit the [] Wirecutter article and click on [these] links,â id., thus âdepriving [t]he Times of the opportunity to receive referral revenue,â id. ¶ 194.
This claim is almost identical to the âmisappropriationâ claim the Second Circuit rejected in Barclays. 650 F.3d 876 (2d Cir. 2011). That case concerned stock recommendations which banks provided to paying clients as a mechanism for generating commissions. Id. at 880â82. The defendant âcompile[d]â those recommendations and provided them âto their own subscribers for a fee.â Id. at 882. The banks brought a âmisappropriationâ claim, stressing that they âspend hundreds of millions of dollars annuallyâ generating the recommendations, and that the defendant âseriously threatens their ability to justify [that] expense.â Id. at 881, 885â86.
The Second Circuit first held that the claim satisfied the conditions for Copyright Act preemption: (1) the âfacts of the Recommendations,â while unprotectable, fell within the subject matter of copyright; and (2) the banks claimed the right to control the reproduction of those recommendations, which falls within the âgeneral scopeâ of copyright. Id. at 902. The Court, however, explained that its precedents recognized a ânarrowâ preemption exception for âhot newsâ claims endorsed by the Supreme Court in the Intâl News Serv. v. Associated Press (INS), 248 U.S. 215 (1918) case. Barclays, 650 F.3d at 896â98.[48] Accordingly, the merits of the claim depended on whether it fell into the ânarrowâ category of âINS-type non-preempted claims.â Id. at 902â03.
The Circuit held it did not. First, while âINS-typeâ claims involve defendants who âsell [purloined] news as though the defendant itself had gathered it,â the Barclays defendant was âselling the information with specific attribution to the issuing [bank].â Id. (emphasis added). For that reason, there was no âmeaningful differenceâ between the defendantâs republication of the recommendations and a âmember[] of the traditional news mediaâ reporting on information âwith proper attribution.â Id. at 903â04. Second, INS-type claims concern defendants who appropriate material (e.g., news) that the defendants âacquire through efforts akin to reporting.â Id. at 903. But the banksâ claim sought âonly to protect their Recommendations, something they create using their expertise and experienceââwhich brought the claim closer to copyrightâs exclusive domain. Id. For those reasons, the defendantâs âserviceâwhich collects, summarizes, and disseminates the news of the [banksâ] Recommendationsâ[was] not the kind of âINS-likeâ product that could support a non-preempted cause of action for misappropriation.â Id. at 905.
The Recommendations Claim fails for the same reasons. First, it satisfies the preemption conditions: it (1) relates to facts within copyrightâs âsubject matter;â and (2) asserts the right to control reproduction of those facts, which falls within copyrightâs âgeneral scope.â Id. at 902.
Second, to the extent the Times has attempted to plead an âINS-type non-preempted claim[]â for misappropriation, id. at 902, it has failed to do so for the reasons discussed in Barclays. OpenAI is not âselling the Recommendation[s] âas its own.ââ Id. at 903. It provides âspecific attribution toâ Wirecutter, which means this is not an INS claim. Id. Moreover, Wirecutter recommendations are not facts that the Times âacquire[s] through efforts akin to reporting;â rather, the Times âseek[s] only to protect [its] Recommendations, [which it] create[s] using [its] expertise and experience.â Id. The claim is therefore governed exclusively by copyright law, under which the quantum of the Timesâs âinvestmentâ is irrelevant to its right to monopolize the results. Compl. ¶ 196; Moodyâs, 808 F.2d at 207 (â[T]o grant copyright protection based merely on the âsweat of the authorâs browâ would risk putting large areas of factual research material off limits and threaten the publicâs unrestrained access to information.â); Barclays, 650 F.3d at 886 (rejecting claim despite allegation that defendant âseriously threatens [banksâ] ability to justify the expense of maintaining [] extensive research operationsâ).
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[47] Financial Information, Inc. v. Moodyâs Investors Serv., Inc., 808 F.2d 204, 206, 208â09 (2d Cir. 1986) (misappropriation claim based on allegation that defendant âcopied 40â50% of [plaintiffâs] informationâ preempted).
[48] INS concerned a news service that âlift[ed] factual stories from AP bulletins and sen[t] them by wire to INS papersâ for republication without attribution to the AP. Barclays, 650 F.3d at 894, 896â98 (quoting INS).
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