When Will We Give Up the Charade That Numbers Are Copyrightable?–National Football Scouting v. Rang
By Eric Goldman
National Football Scouting, Inc. v. Rang, 11-cv-5762-RBL (W.D. Wash. Dec. 13, 2012)
Individual numbers aren’t copyrightable, no matter how much work or judgment went into producing them. This proposition seems so obvious, I feel silly even mentioning it. A number is like a word in a sentence: it could be strung together with other elements into a copyrightable work, but standing alone, it’s too small to constitute “an original work of authorship.” And, of course, we’re always free to reuse any number we want in our own expression.
Yet, despite this common-sense baseline, we have a burgeoning body of caselaw indicating the opposite, including this ruling–one of the cleanest cases to date articulating the proposition that a single number (e.g., “42”) can, by itself, be copyrightable. The court nevertheless finds for the defendant on fair use–leaving this yucky ruling on the copyrightability of individual numbers hanging out there, just waiting for plaintiff misuse.
Rang blogs on the NFL draft at Sports Xchange. He wrote 8 stories about NFL prospects that referenced a total of 18 players’ NFS Player Grades. The opinion doesn’t explain how Rang got access to the NFS reports. NFS sued Rang and Sports Xchange for copyright infringement and trade secret misappropriation.
Citing CDN v. Kapes (one of my least favorite copyright cases of all time) and CCC v. Maclean Hunter, the court says flatly that “a numeric expression of a professional opinion can be copyrightable [because] National arrives at its grade through a weighing of subjective factors, such as personal character, leadership, and poise.”
Having reached that illogical conclusion, the court then contorts the fair use analysis to avoid the logical implications of its illogical conclusion. The court says the nature of the work favors the plaintiff because the grades were unpublished; the court doesn’t really consider the fact-ish nature of the works. It also says that the amount taken weighs in favor of Rang–even though he took 100% of each of the 18 grades–because he didn’t include the grade range (apparently important). The court summarizes its other thoughts about fair use:
Rang’s news articles transformed National’s copyrighted material into a commentary on prospective draftees. Rang did not use the Player Grades as a focal point of his article or create a whole-sale list of Player Grades; he used them only as a jumping off point to discuss Rang’s own impressions of the player and his draft
prospects….The transformative nature of Rang’s articles does not interfere with the potential market for the Scouting Reports. The Scouting Reports are still valuable to the National Football League Clubs that order them, and even if National sought to sell them to the public, Rang’s articles would not act as a market replacement.
Copyright claims dismissed.
Still, the new isn’t all good for Rang. The court survives the trade secret misappropriation claim, rejecting Rang’s argument that opinions can’t be a trade secret.
Related Posts
* Regulation of Reputational Information essay
* Second Circuit Stays Hot News Injunction–Barclays v. theflyonthewall
For more on this topic, see, e.g., Justin Hughes, Created Facts and the Flawed Ontology of Copyright Law (I don’t agree with its normative point) and James Grimmelmann, Three Theories of Copyright in Ratings
[Photo credit: Football player celebrates after scoring a touchdown // ShutterStock]