Brian Hill: Chronically ill, autistic blogger's lawyer blasts Denver Post for Righthaven suit

Thumbnail image for brian hills photo cropped.JPG
Brian Hill.
Twenty-year old diabetic North Carolina hobby blogger Brian Hill, who's being sued by Righthaven LLC for unauthorized use of a Denver Post photo, is practically destitute and can't afford a lawyer. But after reading our item about the case, Fort Collins intellectual property attorney David Kerr offered to take Hill's case on a pro bono basis -- and while he faults Righthaven for its tactics, he also blames the Post for employing such a heavy-handed outfit.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get some answers from the Denver Post -- to say why they're working with this organization," acknowledges Kerr, an attorney with the Santangelo Law Offices. "I'd submit that they're the Post's copyright enforcement arm. They try to contractually separate themselves, but when you come down to it, if the Post really wanted to sue an autistic, chronically ill blogger in North Carolina for one photo, they should put their name on the suit, instead of going through Righthaven and playing contractual games."

david kerr.JPG
David Kerr.
How's Righthaven's approach work? The Nevada-based company purchases the copyright for items from firms such as MediaNews Group, the Post's owner, then files complaints against websites and bloggers like Hill, typically demanding cash payments and rights to domain names in order to squash the suits. The targets thus far include a small South Carolina website that allegedly republished a Mike Rosen column and Internet giant Matt Drudge, who reportedly settled with Righthaven earlier this month for using the same pic -- of a TSA pat-down -- that Hill had published on his site, www.uswgo.com.

Righthaven's plate is plenty full even with the Drudge matter resolved. According to BigMedia.org's Jason Salzman, the company had filed thirty suits in Colorado federal court by mid-month. This fact has yet to appear in the Denver Post, whose editor, Greg Moore, told Salzman, "There's nothing to report. They are suing on our behalf those who infringe on our copyright."

Given that Hill didn't get permission before using the Post's photo, grabbed during a Google Image search, many observers would conclude that he violated the newspaper's rights. But the situation isn't so simple, Kerr believes.

"I think that's where people need to understand copyright law," he maintains. "The fair-use provisions of copyright law essentially say, 'I'm allowing you to use someone else's copyright within a narrow set of circumstances -- and copyright does not allow people to put up impenetrable walls around their copyrighted works. They're entitled to certain protections, but under fair-use provisions, people are allowed to use copyrighted works in certain ways, such as parody and commentary. And if we were to take away those fair-use provisions, I think you'd see a chilling of free speech, since a lot of free speech is based on copyrighted works. And if someone like Brian can't put a picture on his blog because he wants to comment on political things, he's essentially given up part of his First Amendment speech rights to comment on the world around him.

"To a certain extent, it doesn't have anything to do with Brian being autistic or chronically ill. Our contention is that he didn't do anything wrong -- that it was completely fair use," Kerr continues, adding, "In the digital age, copyright laws reflect old thinking. They haven't really caught up with the new technology. We need to try to find a balance -- and I think court cases like this one can help us. They're an opportunity to define what is fair use, how much someone is able to protect copyrighted work, and how much they can ask for infringement damages."

Summons-served-to-Brian-Hill-under-RightHaven-civil-action-thumb-250x318.jpg
A photo of Hill's summons.
In Hill's case, Kerr says Righthaven demanded $6,000 -- an amount that his client is unable to pay.

"It's just a heartbreaking story," Kerr believes. "Brian is on social security disability, and his mom can't work, either. She literally has to check his blood sugar at night because he could slip into a coma. It's that serious: If he's home alone for too long and can't control his blood sugar, she could come home and he would be dead. He'll never work in his life, and his mom can't really work, either. So there are two people living on social security benefits -- and what put me and my boss over the edge was when they told him they were going to try to take away his government disability."

How so? "Brian wrote a letter to the court saying, 'I'm poor. I have no money. My mom and I live on disability' -- and asked for this to go away. Then, two days later, a Righthaven attorney called him, and Brian threw himself at their mercy. He said, 'I have nothing. Will you please let this go? I just wanted to comment about this TSA photo,' which had taken on a life of its own as a symbol of government power; it was all over the place. The attorney told him, 'We'll make it go away for $6,000' -- and after Brian said something to the effect that 'I don't even have six dollars,' the attorney said, 'If you don't pay, we're going to garnish your social security.'

"They quoted fifty dollars a month until he paid the $6,000, which is insane. I was talking to a friend who's a bankruptcy attorney, and he said, 'You can't do that. You can't take away government disability.' And even if you could, it assumes he's not going to defend the case. They'd have to go to court, default him, and the judge would have to award it -- and the judge could lower the penalty all the way down to $210 even if he was found guilty."

At this writing, Steve Gamin, the Righthaven attorney assigned to Hill's case, has not responded to a request for an interview. If and when he replies, we'll update this item.

Regarding the case itself, a judge suggested that Righthaven find a way to consolidate the thirty Colorado suits -- but Kerr has sent a letter on Hill's behalf opposing this tack. "Brian has his own facts, his own case, and potentially a counterclaim against Righthaven and the Denver Post and other people," he allows. "We have to investigate that." He feels "Brian is a really good guy, and he doesn't deserve this. But he's a fighter. He's willing to stand up and fight for other people who can't. He just needed someone to be his voice -- and to a certain extent, that's what we want to be."

In the meantime, Kerr insists that "I don't want to sound like I'm hellbent for leather to go after the Denver Post. But without papers like the Post, I don't know that Righthaven exists. The Denver Post is the beneficiary of this, and if they feel the best way to protect their interest is to sue a chronically ill, autistic person, I think subscribers and advertisers might be interested in knowing that."

More from our Comment of the Day archive: "Reader: Brian Hill may be sympathetic target of Righthaven lawsuit, but he did violate copyright."

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solar_satellite
solar_satellite

It really is in the public interest that the Denver Post cease publishing. Denver should aspire to have a daily newspaper -- if people who subscribe to the Post stop, we could get one.

Jones
Jones

Jason Salzman has the most articulate, fair-minded take I've seen on this. He asks for suggestions on exactly how newspapers should prevent bloggers, as a group, from stealing work and draining the newspaper's advertising base. I pose the same question here. Anyone?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/...

If you send a "take-down" letter on a week old story, the blogger has gotten all the use out of it they need, so what does that accomplish and how does that serve as a deterrent to others? Sadly, Righthaven might decide to make an example out of Brian -- proving that if they can take down this guy, a company with profits and assets need not even try. Notice that Matt Drudge, who I'm sure has an army of attorneys, chose not to take the exact same case to court, and Matt Drudge hates the liberal media more than life itself.

It is very good that Brian has a free attorney advising him now. He needs one. Of course, the attorney is mostly doing this for publicity so that the growing market of copyright defendants will find his name on the Internet when they get the letter that they're being sued, I just hope Brian isn't being victimized by another attorney for that purpose.

To that end, I would like Mr. Kerr to go on record here and now saying that if Brian loses more in court than he could have settled for without Mr. Kerr's publicity-whoring that Mr. Kerr will agree to pay the difference. What say you, Mr. Kerr? Are you a hero or another victimizer with a law degree? A real hero who is taking the case on principle would agree to pay Brian's entire fine, if the case is the way you present it here.

Tyler Goll
Tyler Goll

Agreed, that Huffington Post article is a good one.This line particularly stuck out to me though:

"For journalism to survive, newspaper websites must sell more ads."

I completely disagree. Journalism and News as far as I'm concerned are no longer synonymous. Journalism deals with real world matters from the real world interpretation of the journalist, and there are still plenty of unabashed truth-tellers in the world. News has become a biased, often manipulated conglomeration of vested political and corporate interests that massage facts to help align public opinion with their ultimate goals.

Obviously this is not true of every employee at every news outlet in the world. But I think a good "journalistic" investigation into the business relationships between major corporations and major news outlets would render some rather unpleasant data…

Also Jones, I agree with your line about Kerr, lets see some real commitment to the belief, not just the free publicity!

In the last line of that article Mr. Salzman calls for anyone with a better idea on how newspapers should safeguard their online content to speak up… here's my two cents:

Battling over internet copyright infringement could (and will) easily grow into a quagmire of court doctrine, red tape, wasted money on both prosecution and defense, and ultimately a waste of everyones time. I mean seriously, has anyone stopped to consider the sheer size of the medium?

How about instead of going after the little guys, News Agencies switch to a subscription based online service. Sure $2 to $5 a month doesn't seem like a large amount, but when you have 1, 2, maybe even 3 million subscribers, as well as the fastest, cheapest global distribution center that requires far less staffing than an entire agency building… well, it just seems to add up in MY head.Also, devote your already extensive internal resources to building a name as the most accurate, objective News Agency. An Agency that is devoted providing unbiased news to the masses for their own interpretation. Personally the only reason I don't have a newspaper subscription is I can usually research topics of interest and find the WHOLE story on the internet for free. If I had a reliable outlet that I knew was committed to providing uninfluenced information, I would happily subscribe.

Anonymous
Anonymous

"How about instead of going after the little guys,"

How about instead of writing speeding tickets to speeders, we just raise taxes on everyone?

Why should I have to shell out five bucks a month so that Brian and other bloggers can have free use of material other people paid to produce? That is a completely silly and selfish solution.

If I wanted a blog and didn't have any money for content, I would probably support this plan, also. But that is is socialism, sharing my wealth with people like Brian. What is so onerous about asking for permission or posting a link to the original item, other than making it crystal clear you did not create the story or picture yourself?

I just don't understand the counter argument that it's okay to take things that do not belong to you when there is a fairly simple way to avoid legal trouble, which is ask permission and cite your source. Someone explain to me why that is too hard, and if you are not sure, then, hey, swim at your own risk. Isn't that how life works?

Practically every speeder a cop pulls over thinks his excuse for breaking the law is the exception to the rule, even if it is, "I was in a hurry." Let them go! Raise taxes instead!

The problem here is the amount Righthaven is trying to extort. I think there should be a fine paid directly to the person who was stolen from. I think Brian should have to pay the Denver Post $150 for the one-time use of the photo, which is about what my last speeding ticket cost.

Tyler Goll
Tyler Goll

Except a tax is mandatory and a subscription is voluntary. You wouldn't pay any more than you do for a monthly paper, and you'd be able to read it from virtually any location in the world. I fail to see the selfishness of a voluntary subscription based service...

I agree that asking permission should be the first thing bloggers do when using content from a source that owns the copyright. However, it is also impossible to police the content of every site on the web. Also, the legal proceedings that arise from the pursuant lawsuits waste MY tax dollars on a cause I don't necessarily support.

Seems like a waste of time and money to focus on shoring up one hole in a dam when the foundation is cracked...

Tyler Goll
Tyler Goll

Sounds like another news giant attempting to shore up it's losses to the internet with petty copyright infringement suits.

They're probably just using Righthaven as a white label strong arm because they don't want their reputation tarnished. It's pretty clear they're hurting for profit when they won't drop a suit against Hill after learning about his unfortunate position.

Fight the good fight Kerr and Hill, I support you!

Ken
Ken

I have thought and written about this entire thing in fact here is my letter to the Denver Post:

Kevin DaleDenver Post

Whether or not you have a legitimate complaint agianst Matt Drudge or not the Denver Post should not be affiliating with such a disreputable outfit as Righthaven. In fact Righthaven does not represent you in the suit but represent themselves. Righthaven buys the copyright to your story and image then sues on its own behalf. You in turn lose the control over your own works in the process.

Righthaven does not even have a good track record where it comes to litigation. They have yet to a win a case when it actually hit a court room. Infact their irresponsible litigation has set court precedences that have diluted copyright protection and expanded fair use. There is a case right now that the judge may rule that posting an entire article is fair use.

http://www.lasvegassun.com/new...

If you want to sue Drudge then use a reputable legal firm that will fight for your interest not solely for their own, and you can even keep your own copyrights to boot.

I would encourage you to thoroughly investigate Righthaven before taking the huge risk of affiliating with them. There are several complaints filed with the Nevada State Bar against Righthaven and its CEO Stephen Gibbs.

http://www.lasvegassun.com/new...

Righthaven's business model introduces complications into the case that hurts the Denver Post's chances of a favorable resolution and in fact could expose the Denver Post to counter suits and potential liabilities.

Please carefully consider the ramifications of dealing with Righthaven.

*******

Here was their response:

Hi Ken,

Thanks for your comment. The decision to use Righthaven was made by our corporate parent. Out of our hands at The Post. I have followed the news developments (and will continue to). Hard to say where it will end up, but we are adamant about protecting our work. There is much debate about how best to do that.

Thanks again. -k

Kevin DaleNews DirectorTHE DENVER POST101 W. Colfax, Suite 600Denver, Co. 80202O - 303.954.1213F - 303.954.1090denverpost.com

Michael Roberts
Michael Roberts

Thanks for sharing this exchange, Ken. Very interesting.

Righthaven-v-Coker
Righthaven-v-Coker

My suggestion would be to write "42 USC 407" on your middle finger and show it to Righthaven.

42 U.S.C. 407, also known as Section 207 of the Social Security Act, subpart (a) says:

(a) The right of any person to any future payment under this title shall not be transferable or assignable, at law or in equity, and none of the moneys paid or payable or rights existing under this title shall be subject to execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process, or to the operation of any bankruptcy or insolvency law.

JJJJones
JJJJones

I have been following this case from another country. I had always imagined that the USA is a country that is for freedom and justice. Then I heard about what happened to Brian Hill, so I google searched Righthaven and it's obvious they're a copyright troll who are abusing the law to make a quick buck. I looked more into the case and I heard that when they found out that Brian Hill couldn't afford a lawyer, they were illegally harassing him to pay a certain amount every month out of court from his disability money. He shared the image in good faith on the 1st of Dec for his non-profit site as the image had a share button. Righthaven didn't even inform him to remove the image after they took out the copyright on the 8th for the image. I read that Brian only found out about the case from a journalist. As a law student I feel ashamed of any company using the law in this way because their actions seem abusive and extreme. If the USA allows companies such as Righthaven to act in that way, then I wonder where it will lead?

blizzardo
blizzardo

Thank you David Kerr for taking on Righthaven. What a bunch of asshats they are and somebody needs to fight back.

If you are selling your copyright rights solely for the purpose of allowing someone else to use them to sue people, doesn't that violate the spirit of the copyright law?

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