Disney v. VidAngel
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| Disney Enterprises v. VidAngel, | |
|---|---|
| Court | United States District Court for the Central District of California |
| Full case name | Disney Enterprises, Inc. v. VidAngel, Inc. |
| Decided | March 9, 2019 |
| Court membership | |
| Judge sitting | André Birotte Jr. |
Disney Enterprises, Inc. v. VidAngel, Inc. was a 2016 United States District Court for the Central District of California case in which four major Hollywood studios -- Disney, Lucasfilm, 20th Century Fox, and Warner Bros.—filed a copyright infringement complaint against VidAngel, a company which allows users to filter out objectionable content from movies and TV shows. The studios alleged that the method VidAngel used to filter and stream films to its users was illegal under copyright law because they broke the encryption on DVDs and Blu-rays. VidAngel contended that their method was legal under an exception provided by the Family Movie Act.
Judge André Birotte Jr. granted the studios' motion for preliminary injunction in December 2016, ordering VidAngel to stop streaming movies. VidAngel's appeal for an emergency stay of the injunction was denied by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. The lawsuit forced VidAngel into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection during which they reorganized their business under a streaming model.
In June 2019, a jury ordered VidAngel to pay $62 million in damages to the studios. In September 2020, VidAngel reached a settlement agreement with the studios which reduced the damages to $9.9 million and prohibits VidAngel from streaming content by the four studios. VidAngel is free to stream content from other studios.
VidAngel was founded in 2014 to allow users to select customizable filters to edit out objectionable content, such as graphic violence, nudity, and profanity from films and TV shows. VidAngel's original model was disc-based. VidAngel would buy a DVD or Blu-ray of a movie. The customer would buy the disc from VidAngel for $20. VidAngel would stream the film to the user, after which the user could sell it back to VidAngel for up to $19, making the net cost $1. During a legal deposition, Neal Harmon, one of the company's founders and then CEO, said that VidAngel decrypted and ripped DVDs using the software program AnyDVD HD.[1][2][3]
VidAngel cited the Family Movie Act of 2005 (FMA) as legally protecting customers' right to use their service to filter films.[4] VidAngel's public statements included the claim that FMA protects filtered streaming as long as the movie is an authorized copy watched in the privacy of the home, and no permanent filtered copy is created.[5]
According to VidAngel, after launching DVD and Blu-ray based sales, the company made three other attempts to sell filtering to consumers, including a partnership with Google to add filters to licensed films available on Google Play, filtering movies purchased on YouTube, and buying discs directly from the studios, but the studios rejected all proposals. Studios claimed that VidAngel then bought licensed discs from retail stores, made copies, and employed a method of "streaming from its own 'master' copies of works that VidAngel has created on its own servers rather than layering its filters over an authorized stream".[6]