Domain Seizures, De-Indexing And Censorship: Nevada Judge Dramatically Exceeds Limits Of His Authority


There’s a multi-pronged assault on the internet going on now. It comes key10085 from over-zealous legislators, the US executive branch and individual judges. There’s an effort on multiple fronts to grantover-broadpowers to copyright owners to instigate domain seizures, cut-off funds and de-index “rogue” websites if found guilty of “infringement,” where that concept is very expansively defined with potentially disastrous consequences for free speech and legitimate internet operations.
As you’ve no doubt read there are two pieces of anti-piracy legislation before the US Congress:SOPAand thePROTECT IP Act(“PIPA”). While their stated purpose is to prevent piracy, copyright and trademark violations in another sense they can be seen as media companies and others using legislation to protect their legacy key10088 business models.
SOPA has been widely written about andcriticized. It’s now increasingly unlikely to pass in its current form — luckily. The less-exposed PIPA is equally bad in many respects and grants sweeping powers to private litigants and courts in the interest of protecting copyright owners’property.
This explanation of what SOPA would permit comes from the New York Times:
Under the bill, copyright owners could direct payment providers like Visa and advertising networks like Google’s to cut off business to a Web site simply by filing notice that the site — or “a portion” of it —”engages in, enables or facilitates” intellectual property infringement or is being willfully blind to it . . .
If copyright owners could starve a Web site of money simply by telling a payment processor that the key10093 site was infringing on intellectual property, the bill could stymie legitimate speech . . .
Another provision would allow the attorney key10082 general to sue foreign sites that “facilitate” piracy, and to demand that domestic search engines stop linking to them and that Internet service providers redirect traffic . . .
Despite the fact imitation fendi purses that SOPA isn’t law, a federal (district court) judge in Nevada named Kent Dawson is acting as though it is. Numerous articles have been written this week about his order to Google, Bing, Yahoo, Facebook, Twitter and others to “de-index” the domain names of literallyhundreds of websites that luxury goods maker Chanel alleges sellcounterfeit versions key10094 of its products.
Here’s the relevant portion of key10087 Dawson’s order(.pdf) regarding de-indexing:
The Group II Subject Domain Names shall immediately be de-indexed and/orremoved from any search results pages of all key10091 Internet search engines including, but not limited to,Google, Bing, and Yahoo, and all social media websites including, but not limited to, Facebook,Google+, and Twitter until otherwise instructed by this Court or Plaintiff that any such domain nameis authorized to be reinstated, at which time it shall be reinstated to its former status within eachsearch key10090 engine index from key10092 which it was removed.
There are numerousproceduraland jurisdictional problems with the case. In particular, Google, Bing, Facebook, Yahoo and Twitter are not parties to the litigation. The court has no jurisdiction or authority to order de-indexing of these allegedly offending sites. However, under SOPA it would have such authority to order social networks and search engines like Google to de-index sites without having formaljurisdictionover them.
The implications are pretty key10095 scary from a legal-due process standpoint and from a free speech perspective as well.
We reached out to both Google and Microsoft for comment and they offered official “no comment” statements. It’s in their respective interests to not comply with the court’s order. Doing so would validate the actions of a “rogue judge” exceeding his authority.
Postscript: Texas Republican Congressman Lamar Smith “blasted” Google’s opposition to SOPA as self-serving. However many of the bill’s supporters in Congress are responding to key10084 intense lobbying by commercial interests in the US such as the motion picture industry. The problem is not piracy, which everyone agrees is bad, but the potential authority granted private litigants and the courts on their behalf to seize domains, chill speech and shut down businesses, with limited due process.
Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.
Add Search Engine Land to your Google News feed. Related stories
ChatGPT fails: 13 common errors and mistakes you need to know How to prioritize SEO keywords for content creation How to create a resource page A quick guide to managing your online reputation Create high-quality content that meets Google E-E-A-T standards New on Search Engine Land
Bing Chat available to more users, gains more visual answers, chat history and third-party developer key10089 capabilities How to connect with Gen X, Millennials and Gen Z TikTok’s new ad product gives publishers 50% stake YouTube has a new interface, and not everyone is excited about it GA4 custom funnel reports are here About key10081 the key10083 author
Greg Sterling Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor to Search Engine Land, a member of the programming key10086 team for SMX events and the VP, Market Insights at Uberall. Related topics
ContentSEO
Prev Next
Related Post: