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24 Comm. Law. 9 (2006-2007)
The De Minimis Doctrine: How Much Copying Is Too Much

handle is hein.journals/comlaw24 and id is 9 raw text is: The De Minimis Doctrine: How Much
Copying Is Too Much?
LEE S. BRENNER AND ALLISON S. ROHRER

How much copying is enough to trigger
liability for copyright infringement? A
thumbnail display of a copyright
owner's photograph may be enough but
a full size reproduction may not be. It
all depends on how the work is copied.
Recently, the U.S. District Court for
the Central District of California in
Perfect 10 v. Google, Inc., held that a
thumbnail display of a copyright
owner's photograph was enough to
establish probable liability and granted
in part magazine publisher Perfect 10's
request for a preliminary injunction to
prohibit Google from displaying
thumbnail images of the magazine's
photographs of nude women. Google
contended its copying was protected by
the affirmative defense of fair use but
the court disagreed.'
An alternate but similar approach to
the fair use defense, the de minimis
doctrine, exists to identify when enough
copying has occurred to establish liabil-
ity for copyright infringement.
Although somewhat similar in theory,
this doctrine is separate from the fair
use rubric. Before reaching the question
of whether the use of a copyrighted
work is fair and therefore free from lia-
bility, courts consider the threshold
issue of whether the copying was sub-
stantial enough to subject the copier to
liability. De minimis copying does not
trigger liability.
When a defendant copies a portion
of a plaintiff's work but it is obscured
so that the plaintiff's work is not plain-
ly observable, the copying is likely
within the protective confines of de
minimis use and therefore not action-
able. Thus, in September 2005, the
Lee S. Brenner is a partner and Allison S.
Rohrer is an associate at White O'Connor
Curry LLP in Los Angeles. Any opinions
expressed in this article are those of the
authors and are not intended to reflect
the views of the firm or of its clients.

Southern District of New York held
that the use of elements of a plaintiff's
copyrighted photographs in advertise-
ments for Kate Spade fashion acces-
sories was de minimis in nature and
granted summary judgment without
reaching the issue of fair use.2
By contrast, when a portion of a
copyrighted work has been copied
exactly without any alteration or distor-
tion, thereby leaving the copied materi-
al plainly recognizable, courts are more
inclined to find that the copying has
exceeded the de minimis threshold.
Applying this reasoning in another
2005 decision, the Southern District
of New York held a television program-
mer liable for copying less than 1 per-
cent of a motion picture entitled
Carnegie Hall because the footage
copied was not transformed, altered, or
obscured in any manner.'
This conclusion is not unlike that
reached in Perfect 10, where Google's
thumbnail displays conveyed the full
expression of the plaintiff's photographs.
The analysis, however, is different
because de minimis use goes to the
threshold question of whether actionable
copying has occurred, whereas the fair
use analysis arises only after a finding of
otherwise actionable copying.
Recent decisions addressing the de
minimis doctrine are surfacing in courts
across the country, particularly in the
Second Circuit. These decisions involve
a variety of creative materials used in
television, film, advertising, and musi-
cal compositions. Whether it is possible
to escape liability for copying depends
on many factors, e.g., from the degree
to which the plaintiff's material is rec-
ognizable in the defendant's work to
the significance of the copied material
in relation to the plaintiff's work and in
comparison to the defendant's work,
and from the protectability of the mate-
rial copied to the impact that the copy-
ing will have on the plaintiff's market.

Although the factors involved in the
de minimis analysis are many, the
cases surveyed in this article show
emerging standards that promise to
shape the outcome.
Origins of the De Minimis Doctrine
The central purpose of copyright is to
promote artistic creativity for the gener-
al public good by granting individual
authors a limited monopoly for their
artistic creations .' The scope of the lim-
ited monopoly has been defined by
striking a balance between the interests
of authors in the control and exploita-
tion of their works and society's com-
peting interest in the free flow of ideas,
information, and commerce.'
The Copyright Act protects the inter-
ests of authors by granting authors the
rights to reproduce their works, prepare
derivative works, distribute copies of
their works, and perform and display
their works publicly .' These rights are
far-reaching because they are exclusive,
and thus may be freely enjoyed to the
exclusion of all others. Anyone who
violates any of the exclusive rights of
the copyright owner is an infringer of
the copyright.!
Nonetheless, the exclusive rights
granted to copyright owners are not
absolute. Copyright owners may not
hold others liable for infringement for
an insubstantial violation of any one of
their exclusive rights. This means that
even where the fact of copying is con-
ceded, no legal consequences will fol-
low from that fact unless the copying is
substantial.' As Judge Learned Hand
observed long ago: Even where there
is some copying, that fact is not conclu-
sive of infringement. Some copying is
permitted. In addition to copying, it
must be shown that this has been done
to an unfair extent.9
The principle that copying must be
substantial to be actionable reflects the
legal maxim de minimis non curat

Spring 2006 LD Communications Lawyer ED 9

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