Two significant decisions under the Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA) in recent weeks have provided new defenses to companies alleged to have run afoul of the statute.  Bringing the long-running litigation against Hulu to a close–at least pending appeal–the court in In re: Hulu Privacy Litigation granted summary judgment in favor of Hulu, holding that the plaintiffs could not prove that Hulu knowingly violated the VPPA.  A week later in a more recently filed case, Austin-Spearman v. AMC Network Entertainment, LLC, the court dismissed the complaint on the basis that the plaintiff was not a “consumer” protected by the VPPA.  Both rulings provide comfort to online content providers, while also raising new questions as to the scope of liability under the VPPA.

In re: Hulu Privacy Litigation

In a decision with wide-ranging implications, the Hulu court granted summary judgment against the plaintiffs, holding that they had not shown that Hulu knowingly shared their video selections in violation of the VPPA.  The plaintiffs’ allegations were based on Hulu’s integration of a Facebook “Like” button into its website.  Specifically, the plaintiffs alleged that when the “Like” button loaded on a user’s browser, Hulu would automatically send Facebook a “c_user” cookie containing the user’s Facebook user ID.  At the same time, Hulu would also send Facebook a “watch page” that identified the video requested by the user.  The plaintiffs argued that Hulu’s transmission of the c_user cookie and the watch page allowed Facebook to identify both the Hulu user and that user’s video selection and therefore violated the VPPA.

The plaintiffs’ case foundered, however, on their inability to demonstrate that Hulu knew that Facebook’s linking of those two pieces of information was a possibility.  According to the court, “there is no evidence that Hulu knew that Facebook might combine a Facebook user’s identity (contained in the c_user cookie) with the watch page address to yield ‘personally identifiable information’ under the VPPA.”  Without showing that Hulu had knowingly disclosed a connection between the user’s identity and the user’s video selection, there could be no VPPA liability.

The court’s decision, if upheld on appeal, is likely to provide a significant defense to online content providers sued under the VPPA.  Under the decision, plaintiffs must now be able to show not only that the defendant company knew that the identity and video selections of the user were disclosed to a third party, but also that the company knew that that information was disclosed in manner that would allow the third party to combine those pieces of information to determine which user had watched which content.  While Hulu prevailed only at the summary judgment stage after four years of litigation, other companies could likely make use of this same rationale at the pleadings stage, insisting that plaintiffs set out a plausible case in their complaint that the defendant had the requisite level of knowledge.

Austin Spearman v. AMC Network Entertainment

The AMC decision turned on the VPPA’s definition of the term “consumer” and illustrated how that seemingly [...]

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