This post examines an opinion issued in a civil suit: Luis v.
Zang, 2013 WL 811816 (U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio 2013). It was initiated
by Javier Luis, who originally filed his complaint in a federal court in
Florida, but the defendants had the case “removed” to the federal court in
Ohio. Luis v. Zang, supra.
In his complaint, Luis alleged that Awareness Technologies,
“a software `maker’ in Los Angeles, California”,
`intentionally targets their product at
spouses in their marketing campaigns enticing them with the lure of finding
out everything that goes on in the targeted computer's private
accounts,’ in a manner that goes `far beyond . . . the legal monitoring of
children and employees.’ . . .
[Luis] alleges Awareness `knew or should have
known that their powerful and potentially dangerous product needed to have more
stringent measures built in against illegal interception of communications,’
and that Defendant is `therefore guilty of negligence and product liability in
that its product was unsafely put in the hands of consumers who [Awareness]
knew or should have known would use it for illegal purposes, and targeted . . .
this behavior in their marketing campaigns.’ . . .
In the same paragraph . . ., [Luis] references
an alleged settlement agreement between the Federal Trade Commission and a
different company (non-party CyberSpy, LLC) concerning what [he] alleges to be
similar marketing practices for a similar product called `RemoteSpy.’
With respect to [Awareness
Technologies’] software product, [Luis] alleges that his own computer (in
Florida) `may have been infected’ with spyware, through [his] internet
communications with Cathy Zang. . . . [He] alleges that his own oral, email,
and instant message communications with Ms. Zang were wrongfully intercepted by
Defendant Joseph Zang, both through the use of WebWatcher software, and via
other audio and video recording devices.
Luis v. Zang, supra. (The opinion notes that “Joseph Zang is one
of the individually named Defendants” in the lawsuit”, but Cathy Zang is
not.” Luis v. Zang, supra.)
As to Luis’ legal claims, the opinion explains that in his
complaint, he alleged that
Awareness Technologies . . . is
responsible for all `marketing and production’ of a computer software product
called `WebWatcher.’ . . . [Luis] alleges that Awareness violated federal . . .
wiretapping laws when other individual defendants -- unaffiliated with
Awareness -- purchased and installed WebWatcher software on a home computer in
Ohio, for the purpose of permitting Joseph Zang to conduct electronic
surveillance of his then-wife, Cathy Zang.
Although [Luis] alleges he has never
met Cathy Zang in person, he alleges that he virtually met her, via a
`Metaphysics’ internet chat room, in January or February 2009. . . . Shortly
thereafter, [Luis] alleges that he began to have `daily’ communications, in the
course of a `caring relationship’ with Ms. Zang via the telephone and computer.
. . .
Luis v. Zang, supra.
As noted above, Luis claimed that Awareness Technologies violated
“the federal Wiretap Act . . . by intercepting [his] oral and electronic communication”
and that he was entitled to “monetary damages and filed a Rule 12(b)(6) motion
to dismiss Luis’ wiretapping cause of action for failure to state a claim. Luis v.
Zang, supra. As Wikipedia notes, a
Rule 12(b)(6) motion “is how lawsuits with insufficient legal theories
underlying their cause of action are dismissed from court.” If a lawsuit sufficiently alleges a viable
legal claim, and has issues of fact to be determined, it will go to a trial
(absent settlement). If it does not
allege a viable legal claim, the case cannot go forward.
In its motion to dismiss, Awareness Technologies argued that
WebWatcher does not
`intercept’ any communications, such as
that term consistently has been defined under the federal Wiretap Act and
parallel state statutes. Additionally, [it] argues that as a mere manufacturer,
it cannot be held liable under any of the theories asserted by [Luis] for the
alleged wrongful use of its software product.
Luis v. Zang, supra.
The federal district court judge who has this case referred
it to a U.S. Magistrate Judge to assess the merits of the motion to dismiss and
write an opinion explaining whether it should be granted. Luis v.
Zang, supra. She began her opinion
by explaining that
[t]o survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to
dismiss, a plaintiff must provide more than `labels and conclusions, and a
formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action.’ Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (2007). The complaint must contain `either direct or
inferential allegations respecting all the material elements to sustain a
recovery under some viable legal theory.’ Lewis v. ACB Business Servs.,
Inc., 135 F.3d 389 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit 1998).
Luis v. Zang, supra.
The Magistrate Judge then addressed the issues in this case,
noting that the
Federal Wiretap Act, 18 U.S. Code § 2510 et seq., . . . prohibit[s]
the interception of `any wire, electronic, or oral communication through the
use of any electronic, mechanical, or other device.’ 18 U.S. Code § 2510(4). However, when the federal wiretap law known as Title III of the
Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 was first enacted, it was
designed to protect telephone communications, not email . . . or other forms of
electronic, internet-based communication. . . .
In 1986, Congress enacted the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (`ECPA’) to extend the reach of the existing wiretap
law to transmissions of electronic data by computer. The ECPA did this through .
. . Title I, known as the Wiretap Act, and an entirely new section in Title II,
called the Stored Communications Act, see 18 U.S. Code §2701, et seq. In general,
the Stored Communications Act protects communications that are `stored’
electronically on computers, but does not provide the same degree of protection
as offered by Title I (the Wiretap Act).
Luis v. Zang, supra.
The Magistrate Judge explained that the U.S. Court of
Appeals whose decisions are binding precedent on the U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of Ohio, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6thCircuit, has not yet addressed the issue raised by
this case: whether the Wiretap Act
prohibits the use of software commonly known as `spyware’ to obtain another
person's emails and/or a record of other computer activities. However, other federal courts consistently
have held that a defendant's access and review of email and other electronic
communications does not violate the Wiretap Act unless it is `contemporaneous’
with the intended recipient's access. . . .
The
courts adopting this holding have reasoned that the term `intercept’ as defined
in the Wiretap Act requires interception of the communication either before it
reaches the intended recipient, or `contemporaneous with transmission’ -- but
not after it reaches that destination when presumably, the
data is placed in electronic storage. See, e.g., U.S. v. Steiger, 318
F.3d 1039 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit 2003).
Luis v. Zang, supra
(emphasis in the original).
She then noted that
[a]ccording to an affidavit filed by
the CEO of Defendant Awareness, the software at issue in this case is designed
to record `various activities . . . such as e-mails sent and case, defining the time frame in which
this event occurs, the CEO further avers that the software sends all of the
recorded activity over the internet to `an online account,’ where it can be
viewed at a later time.
Luis v. Zang, supra.
The Magistrate Judge also explained that Luis was relying on
several cases involving `keylogger’
software to argue that such software has been held not to `intercept’
electronic communications under the Wiretap Act, because it only accesses
`stored’ data. For example, in Bailey as in the instant case,
a husband surreptitiously installed keylogger software on his then-wife's
computer.
The court granted summary judgment to
the husband on the Wiretap Act and comparable Michigan state law claims, based
upon evidence that `the key logger only allowed Defendant Bailey to learn
[email and IM account] passwords, which were used to [later] access and
copy Plaintiff's email and messages,’ without any `contemporaneous’
interception of those messages.
Luis v. Zang, supra. (For more on the facts and the court’s
decision in the Bailey case, check
out this prior post.)
In arguing that there had been an “interception,” Luis
relied on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit’s decision
in U.S. v. Szymuszkiewicz, 622 F.3d
701 (2010):
In Szymuszkiewicz, the
Seventh Circuit affirmed the criminal conviction of a defendant who had
secretly programmed his supervisor's email program to duplicate and send to him
`within the same second’ all emails that were sent to her. . . . In
affirming the conviction, the court rejected the defendant's argument that his
actions did not violate the Wiretap Act because he did not `intercept’ the
emails contemporaneously.
The court held that although the emails
may have been forwarded to the defendant while in temporary `storage,’ the
process would have been completed so close in time it was `contemporaneous by
any standard.’
Luis v. Zang, supra. (For more on the Szymuszkiewicz case, check out this prior post.)
The Magistrate
Judge then found that there is a
distinction between `keylogger’
software that does not simultaneously transmit the user's data over the
internet, and the type of `spyware’ (whether or not termed `keylogger’
software) that is `web-based.’ . . .
Unlike the cases relied upon by [Awareness
Technologies], the facts presented involve immediate (or close to immediate)
interception of keystrokes on a computer and transmission to the `spy's’
electronic account. For that reason, [Luis] asserts that the use of [Awareness
Technologies’] keylogging software satisfies the definition of an
`intercept[ion]’ under the Wiretap Act.
Luis v. Zang, supra.
She found that “spyware can violate the Wiretap Act if it
transmits captured or recorded information over the internet” and that timing
is “irrelevant”. Luis v. Zang, supra. In so
doing, she relied on the decision in Klumb v. Goan, 884 F.Supp.2d 644 (U.S.District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky 2012), which held that
whether the email is
rerouted within a `blink-of-an-eye’ is
not of primary importance to the router switching analysis. If it were, a smart
programmer could simply program the software to wait a certain amount of time
before rerouting the email through the internet to the unauthorized third
party.
The point is that a program has been
installed on the computer which will cause emails sent at some time in the
future through the internet to be rerouted automatically through the internet
to a third party address when the intended recipient opens the email for the
first time.
Luis v. Zang, supra. The Magistrate Judge therefore rejected
Awareness Technologies’ argument that no “intercept” had occurred, which meant
the case could not be dismissed for that reason. Luis v.
Zang, supra.
But the judge then found that Luis did not have a
viable cause of action under the Wiretap Act against Awareness Technologies
because the section of the Wiretap Act
that provides for a private civil
remedy, 18 U.S. Code § 2520(a), limits the category of viable defendants
to those individuals or entities that have `intercepted, disclosed, or
intentionally used [a device] in violation of this chapter.’
Although manufacturers are not
explicitly excluded, the choice of verbs used in the plain language of the
statute makes clear the statute `does not contemplate imposing civil liability
on software manufacturers and distributers for the activities of third
parties.’ Potter v. Havlicek, 2008 WL 2556723 at *7 (U.S.
District Court for the Southern District of Ohio 2008).
Luis v. Zang, supra.
She therefore recommended to the district court judge who
has the case that “all claims” against Awareness Technologies should be
dismissed. Luis v. Zang, supra.
case was fully reversed in the 6th circuit in Aug 2016
ReplyDeletecase was fully reversed in aug 2016
ReplyDelete