Greer v. Moon, No. 20-cv-00647 (D. Utah Sep. 16, 2020)

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Greer v. Moon 2:20-cv-00647 — District Court, D. Utah

  • Docket No.
    2:20-cv-00647
  • Court
    District Court, D. Utah
  • Filed
    Sep 15, 2020
  • Terminated
    Apr 22, 2024
  • Nature of Suit
    820 Copyright
  • Cause
    17:0501 Copyright Infringement
  • Jurisdiction
    Federal Question
  • Jury Demand
    None
  • Last Filing
    Aug 6, 2024

Parties (4)

Parties
Joshua Moon, Kiwi Farms, Lolcow, LLC, Russell G. Greer

Recent Filings (showing 5 of 30)

# Date Description Filing
Aug 6, 2024 Case no longer referred to Magistrate Judge Jared C. Bennett. (kpf)
113 May 15, 2024 ORDER of USCA Supreme Court Circuit as to 45 Notice of Appeal, filed by Russell G. Greer. Supreme Court order dated 05/13/2024 denying certiorari. (jrj) (Entered: 05/16/2024)
112 Apr 28, 2024 NOTICE OF TRANSMITTAL that case has been transferred to Northern District of Floridia via electronic given case number 3:24-cv-00122-MCR-ZCB. (nl) (Entered: 04/29/2024)
111 Apr 25, 2024 Report on the Final Decision of an action mailed to the Register of Copyrights Office. (kpf) (Additional attachment(s) added on 4/26/2024: # 1 Copy Right Form) (kpf). (Entered: 04/26/2024) PDF
110 Apr 25, 2024 NOTICE OF TRANSMITTAL that case has been transferred to Northern District of Florida. (kpf) (Entered: 04/26/2024)

Greer v. Moon 21-4128 — Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

  • Docket No.
    21-4128
  • Court
    Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
  • Filed
    Oct 26, 2021
  • Nature of Suit
    3820 Copyright
  • Last Filing
    Oct 15, 2023

Recent Filings (showing 5 of 11)

# Date Description Filing
10010936535 Oct 15, 2023 Case termination for opinion
10010794067 Jan 5, 2023 [10967591] Calendar Acknowledgment Form filed by Joshua Moon. Served on 01/06/2023. Manner of Service: email. [21-4128] GGS [Entered: 01/06/2023 12:15 PM]
10010791785 Jan 2, 2023 [10966429] Order filed by Clerk of the Court denying Appellees’ Motion to Waive Oral Argument. The oral argument set for January 18, 2023 in Denver, Colorado remains set as scheduled. Counsel for Defendants - Appellees shall file a calendar acknowledgment form by January 5, 2023. Served on 01/03/2023. [21-4128] [Entered: 01/03/2023 10:16 AM]
10010776728 Dec 1, 2022 [10959168] Response filed by Russell G. Greer to Appellees' Motion to Waive Oral Argument. Served on 12/02/2022. Manner of Service: email. This pleading complies with all required privacy and virus certifications: Yes. [21-4128] AG [Entered: 12/02/2022 12:34 AM]
10010776140 Nov 30, 2022 [10958830] Calendar Acknowledgment Form filed by Russell G. Greer. Served on 12/01/2022. Manner of Service: email. [21-4128] GWK [Entered: 12/01/2022 07:49 AM]

GREER v. MOON 3:24-cv-00122 — District Court, N.D. Florida

  • Docket No.
    3:24-cv-00122
  • Court
    District Court, N.D. Florida
  • Filed
    Mar 19, 2024
  • Terminated
    Jun 10, 2024
  • Nature of Suit
    820 Copyright
  • Cause
    17:501 Copyright Infringement
  • Jurisdiction
    Federal Question
  • Jury Demand
    None
  • Last Filing
    Oct 16, 2024

Parties (4)

Parties
RUSSELL G GREER, JOSHUA MOON, LOLCOW LLC, KIWI FARMS

Recent Filings (showing 5 of 30)

# Date Description Filing
Oct 16, 2024 ACTION REQUIRED BY MAGISTRATE JUDGE: Chambers of MAGISTRATE JUDGE ZACHARY C BOLITHO notified that action is needed Re: 132 Mail Returned. (mah)
132 Oct 15, 2024 Mail Returned as Undeliverable. Mail sent to Russell G. Greer re: 128 ORDER. Order mailed to 1155 S. Twain Avenue, Suite 108420, Las Vegas, NV 89169. (Attachment: #1 Notice of Returned Mail). (mah) (Entered: 10/17/2024) PDF
131 Jul 10, 2024 AO 121 Copyright Case Notification of order entered. Copy sent to the Register of Copyrights. U.S. Copyright Office, 101 Independence Ave. S.E., Washington, D.C. 20559-6000. (adf) (Entered: 07/11/2024) PDF
130 Jun 10, 2024 ACKNOWLEDGMENT re 129 Case Transferred Out to Another District. Case transferred from Florida Northern has been opened in District of Utah as case 2:24cv00421, filed 06/11/2024. (jfj) (Entered: 06/13/2024) PDF
129 Jun 10, 2024 Interdistrict Transfer to the District of Utah. (jfj) (Entered: 06/11/2024)

Greer v. Moon 2:24-cv-00421 — District Court, D. Utah

  • Docket No.
    2:24-cv-00421
  • Court
    District Court, D. Utah
  • Filed
    Jun 10, 2024
  • Nature of Suit
    820 Copyright
  • Cause
    17:0501 Copyright Infringement
  • Jurisdiction
    Federal Question
  • Jury Demand
    Plaintiff
  • Last Filing
    Apr 27, 2026

Parties (4)

Parties
Russell G. Greer, Lolcow LLC, Kiwi Farms, Joshua Moon

Recent Filings (showing 5 of 50)

# Date Description Filing
473 Apr 27, 2026 RESPONSE re 468 Objection to Magistrate Judge Decision 460 to District Court filed by Russell G. Greer. (alf) (Entered: 04/28/2026) 1
472 Apr 14, 2026 MEMORANDUM in Opposition re 465 Response re 462 Order filed by Russell G. Greer. (alf) (Entered: 04/15/2026) 1
471 Apr 14, 2026 MEMORANDUM in Opposition re 469 MOTION to Strike 464 Answer to Counterclaim and Memorandum in Support; MOTION to deem factual allegations admitted filed by Plaintiff Russell G. Greer. (alf) (Entered: 04/15/2026) 1
470 Apr 13, 2026 Modification of Docket re 469 MOTION to Strike : Error: The document is requesting two possible reliefs. An event should be chosen for each relief filer is requesting, including motions in the alternative. Correction: MOTION to deem factual allegations admitted added to the entry. No further action is needed. (alf) (Entered: 04/15/2026)
469 Apr 13, 2026 MOTION to Strike 464 Answer to Counterclaim and alternative MOTION to deem factual allegations admitted and Memorandum in Support filed by Defendants Lolcow LLC, Joshua Moon, Counter Claimants Lolcow LLC, Joshua Moon. Motions referred to Jared C. Bennett.(Hardin, Matthew). Added MOTION on 4/15/2026 (alf). (Entered: 04/14/2026) 1
Last time Greer blew past the sanctions deadline it took the court three weeks to respond, so not really holding my breath for anything else happening soon except for maybe the court's ruling on what Greer owes Hardin in sanctions.

Greer's next filing will be another motion asking the court to let him explain why he missed another deadline and how it's excusable neglect because he thought that because they hadn't responded to his prior motion asking to file a motion that's now several months late he didn't need to do anything else in the case. Soon even the judges will lose track of what Greer is asking extensions for and the case will come to even more of a standstill.
 
Because this case is taking up way too much space in my head for some unaccountable reason, I went back to Ye Olde Docket and reviewed Hardin's "preservation of objections" (ECF 231) to the District Judge fucking around and reducing Greer's sanction back in February after Greer's objection. Hardin calls out Barlow for not adhering to the local rules at the time:

1761137198946.png

True enough, Greer objected at ECF 221 -- on January 21st. Hardin never filed a response, foolishly assuming Barlow wouldn't sustain the objection without asking Hardin to weigh in. But the local rules have more to say on the subject of objections, as it turns out:

1761137365621.png

Oops. "MUST." Hardin evidently never sent a proposed order to Barlow, as he was required to do per (3), two weeks after Greer filed his objection (by February 4th). If he had done so, he would presumably have mentioned it in his filing preserving his objections. Ultimately, Barlow made his bullshit ruling on February 10th.

All that being said, I hope to fuck if Hardin again chooses not to file a response to Greer's objection, he at least sends the fucking email after the fourteen days have passed this time around (which would be October 28th).
 
All that being said, I hope to fuck if Hardin again chooses not to file a response to Greer's objection, he at least sends the fucking email after the fourteen days have passed this time around (which would be October 28th).
You've done a far better job of articulateing my anxieties and misgivings about various things in this case than I have. I think this example (as well as the whole shitshow that was the Vic Lasagna case and thread) shows why doomers and nay-sayers shouldn't just be dismissed out-of-hand. Null has a unique advantage in that he has multiple people on his side looking at this from multiple perspectives and I hope (and honestly think he is, he's not stupid enough to just dismiss what's said here) he uses this to advantage to discuss options and strategies with Hardin.

As a quick summary, and given this information, I will reiterate my position: It should be assumed that this court and all courts going forward are openly hostile. There should be no expectation of common judicial leeway or courtesy, or that any mistakes will be fixable. Rules should be gone over with a fine tooth comb. Filings asking for compensation should overly emphasis the burden places on Null and Hardin. Don't let anything go or assume anything you would for a normal case. Oh, and don't ever remind Greer of a deadline again. Hardin isn't his lawyer and he isn't his mommy, never do any work for that retard.

Of course I realize this is all easier said than done, and Hardin is doing it FOR FREE (not literally), but I hope something can be learned from this. Or don't, tbh I get more of my entertainment from the hopium huffers in the thread at this point. It's like the inverse of bossman- instead of gambaing and losing it all, then being suprised and angry, for this thread it's a judge makes a ruling that sucks, people are suprised but are SURE that the next one will be better, just gotta give Goofy Greer enough rope!
 
Oops. "MUST." Hardin evidently never sent a proposed order to Barlow, as he was required to do per (3), two weeks after Greer filed his objection (by February 4th). If he had done so, he would presumably have mentioned it in his filing preserving his objections. Ultimately, Barlow made his bullshit ruling on February 10th.

All that being said, I hope to fuck if Hardin again chooses not to file a response to Greer's objection, he at least sends the fucking email after the fourteen days have passed this time around (which would be October 28th).
(3) does not overrule (2), and proposed orders are never a 'must' but an opportunity. If Mr. Hardin wanted to give Barlow a proposed order, he was required to do it in 14 days. But he was not required to submit a proposed order. The one court case which have weighed in on that section confirms my read:

"BYU has not entered a formal response to Winston's objections—which the Court notes is not required of BYU under the pertinent local rule. Instead, BYU has submitted a proposed order and requests that the Court affirm the Magistrate Judge's ruling for the reasons expressed in the Magistrate Judge's decision." See: Brigham Young University v. PFIZER, INC., Case No. 2:06-CV-890 TS BCM, D. Utah 2010

You can choose to do either an objection, the proposed order, or even both. I am aware of no case which posits that section (3) overrules (2). I've even looked at the text itself, because Utah has shifted provisions of its local rules around in recent years. In fact there is evidence that no action is needed by a non-movant even if the court makes it's ruling months later. See:

CLEARPLAY, INC. v. DISH NETWORK, LLC, Case No. 2:14-cv-00191-DN-CMR., D. Utah 2022 ("Neither a response from Plaintiff nor a hearing is necessary for the resolution of Defendants' Objection" for a ruling that was decided nearly a full month after the objection)

Interestingly, there is also some authority (under even older rules) for the idea that a District Judge can ignore (2) if he feels that giving a response is unhelpful:

"Under subsection (c) of the Local Rule, the court ordinarily will not sustain an objection without first giving the opposing party an opportunity to respond. However, given that the court's ruling here turns on purely legal issues that were fully and adequately briefed, together with limitations on supplying in responsive briefing new argument and authority not previously submitted to the magistrate judge, the court determined it would not be materially helpful to receive additional briefing and elected not to put the County Defendants to unnecessary expense." - Blundell v. Elliott, Case No. 1:20-cv-00143-RJS-DBP, D. Utah 2021

That is all to say, I don't really see much evidence supporting your read on the local rules, but I suppose there's just a lack of evidence either way

Edited my post to remove some confusion. All the cases I rely on are based on old rules as there isn't really any caselaw on the new ones. The only difference from 2023-2024 local rules (as relates to the argument) is that 72-2 and 72-3 were switched.
 
Yeah, really amazing this case is now being held up on a document that will more than likely have zero relevance to Greer's copyright case. Like really, what could a restraining order application have to do with that? But since Greer didn't argue that basic point, he's stuck getting it.
It's in a weird state of relevance and non-relevance. If this was solely a copyright case, sure, it would be irrelevant. In theory that's what it is now after the 10th returned. However, Greer keeps complaining about harassment, both during the case and as part of his theory of damages. He keeps putting these allegations on the record, even after the judge warns him to stay relevant.

If this case ever makes it to arguing about damages, Greer is sure to include harassment as part of his claims. Hardin/Null have a legitimate expectation that they will need to argue against this, making any evidence about "past harassment" relevant to their defense. On top of that, Greer himself indicated that the RO was relevant, back when he was "happy to provide" it. Hardin would be (inexcusably) negligent if he didn't demand a known relevant document like that, and the judge would be remiss if he let Greer hide it.
 
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(3) does not overrule (2), and proposed orders are never a 'must' but an opportunity. If Mr. Hardin wanted to give Barlow a proposed order, he was required to do it in 14 days. But he was not required to submit a proposed order. The one court case which have weighed in on that section confirms my read:

I'm not suggesting that (3) overrules (2), but I screenshotted the whole section from the current rules (December 2024) and (3) says "must." The plain language of the text is "must, after 14 days," not "If you want to, you must do so after 14 days."

To me, the reading of the rules (without looking at caselaw) seems more like "The District Judge can't sustain the objection before the opportunity to respond (optional unless ordered), or before the non-moving party submits their proposed order after 14 days." In other words, it seems to me like those 14 days of non-action by the judge is the non-moving party's "opportunity," of which Hardin failed to avail himself by either formal response or proposed order.

To be even more pedantic, the rules don't even say the District Judge has to order a response if he's leaning towards sustaining; just that he has to give the non-moving party opportunity to respond, and Hardin had ample opportunity. Hardin's complaint that "the Court never called for the views of the Defendants" is almost Greer-esque in that regard ("You didn't remind me of blah blah"). He could've responded and didn't; he should've emailed the proposed order after 14 days and didn't.

Oh, and don't ever remind Greer of a deadline again.

For fuck's almighty sake yes. I'm terrified of the fact that he's already done it a few times possibly being cited as some sort of precedent. Fucking fuck.
 
I'm not suggesting that (3) overrules (2), but I screenshotted the whole section from the current rules (December 2024) and (3) says "must." The plain language of the text is "must, after 14 days," not "If you want to, you must do so after 14 days."
If you must file a proposed order after 14 days then the part that says you don't need to respond is meaningless, because depending on the objection, your proposed order might end up looking like a long response/reply instead. And if the long form isn't allowed, you end up forfeiting your right to respond if you obey (2).

Courts routinely disfavor readings that introduce surplusage be it in contracts, laws, or elsewhere.

Another problem is that I'm not even sure how (3) is supposed to work. Do you get unlimited time to email a protective order, or merely have to do it by the end of 15th day? Again, this is very important, because if it's the latter then this once again steps on the feet of (2), and even makes itself superfluous to the extent that if that was the interpretation, (2) would just say "15 days" instead to any extent that the PO is supposed to be treated as a response.

However, my reading provides no conflict. Proposed orders are almost never necessary (bar things like regarding agreements between two parties), and this seems merely an opportunity to file one, but not mandated. Indeed, if your interpretation would have been correct, Barlow would likely have mentioned in his order that the defense failed to object. I've glanced over his order, and there appears to be no such mention.

Further, reading that clause the same way as other deadlines in the same ruleset (for example, "A response to a [Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b), 12(c), or 23(c)] motion must be filed within 28 days after service of the motion." - DUCivR 7-1 (A) (4) ) reveals a similar "must" when in truth it is an exercise of a right. You have a right to file a response to 12(b) motion to dismiss within 28 days and if you fail to do that, you lose your right to file that specific response without a leave from the court. There is nothing to suggest that failing to respond to Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss removes your right to file a response to a later Rule 12 (c) motion. That is to say, if Mr. Hardin was obligated to file a proposed order, he would only have waived his section 3 right to that proposed order not a right granted under section 2.

The caselaw I cited do not seem to conflict with this reading (though I will concede that it might not be the definitive answer)

To be even more pedantic, the rules don't even say the District Judge has to order a response if he's leaning towards sustaining; just that he has to give the non-moving party opportunity to respond, and Hardin had ample opportunity. Hardin's complaint that "the Court never called for the views of the Defendants" is almost Greer-esque in that regard ("You didn't remind me of blah blah"). He could've responded and didn't; he should've emailed the proposed order after 14 days and didn't.
But a proposed order is not a response, and that is my issue with you treating it like one. It can be used in addition to a response.
For fuck's almighty sake yes. I'm terrified of the fact that he's already done it a few times possibly being cited as some sort of precedent. Fucking fuck.
Greer can't be given more leeway if there is proof he knew and disregarded the deadline, but there is a high chance that he could be given a leway by this court if he could pretend to have forgotten about it. It doesn't end up helping Greer either way
 
But a proposed order is not a response, and that is my issue with you treating it like one. It can be used in addition to a response.
It wasn't my intent to conflate the two, obviously they are not the same thing. I'm mainly hung up on words like "opportunity" and "must."

The plain language doesn't seem all that confusing really; like I said, Hardin could've responded (wasn't required, but did have the opportunity) and didn't; he should've emailed ("must") the proposed order after 14 days and didn't. And it appears to be a simple 14-day deadline like any other rule's deadline, an if-then statement, if you will. If the District Judge hasn't overruled by 14 days, then you must email a proposed order.

And the Judge doesn't also seem to have an obligation to order the non-moving party to file a response (as opposed to the proposed order, which again says "must"). He just has to provide "opportunity" for response, in the text. The doesn't say he "shall order" or whatever prior to sustaining the objection.

If your reading of "must" is as above though, it makes me wonder if "must" also doesn't carry the same weight elsewhere, to our sorrow. Just thinking out loud but we plebs are led to believe that these words have particular power when it comes to the law. It's troubling to suggest that maybe they don't, and that other instances of "shall" and "must" aren't going to play by the rules when they come up in our plights.
 
It wasn't my intent to conflate the two, obviously they are not the same thing. I'm mainly hung up on words like "opportunity" and "must."

The plain language doesn't seem all that confusing really; like I said, Hardin could've responded (wasn't required, but did have the opportunity) and didn't; he should've emailed ("must") the proposed order after 14 days and didn't. And it appears to be a simple 14-day deadline like any other rule's deadline, an if-then statement, if you will. If the District Judge hasn't overruled by 14 days, then you must email a proposed order.

And the Judge doesn't also seem to have an obligation to order the non-moving party to file a response (as opposed to the proposed order, which again says "must"). He just has to provide "opportunity" for response, in the text. The doesn't say he "shall order" or whatever prior to sustaining the objection.
The "opportunity" is an order to respond.

Failure to file a Proposed Order (or waiving a right to do so) cannot result in court denying you your right to respond.
If your reading of "must" is as above though, it makes me wonder if "must" also doesn't carry the same weight elsewhere, to our sorrow. Just thinking out loud but we plebs are led to believe that these words have particular power when it comes to the law. It's troubling to suggest that maybe they don't, and that other instances of "shall" and "must" aren't going to play by the rules when they come up in our plights
"Must" for a party is different than a "must" for a Judge. A party failing to "must" correctly waives whatever they were "must" to do and if that "must" was a court order than they may even be sanctioned (or given a few more "musts" in Greer's case). A judge failing to "must" carries no immediate effect for the judge, but almost guarantees a reversal on the issue on appeal (presuming it was preserved properly).

Technically speaking, a Federal Judge can ignore all "musts" as there's very little consequence for him. It's a shame, but it is what it is.
 
We've got a live one at SCOTUS! As we've mentioned over in the main Cox v. Sony thread, amicus briefs have been pouring in today in support of Sony, from the usual suspects: RIAA, the Motion Picture Association, songwriters' groups, Screen Actors Guild, and so on. Sadly, none have namedropped Greer v. Moon -- until just now. "Former Members of Congress and Registers and General Counsels of the U.S. Copyright Office" have thoughts on the matter, and Dipshitforlips appears in their brief. (They also mention Grande Communications Networks v. UMG Recordings, which is another case that cites Greer v. Moon, but SCOTUS has it in limbo still.)

1761172113764.png
1761172162717.png

Just when we thought we were getting ghosted by both sides, too.
 

Attachments

Technically speaking, a Federal Judge can ignore all "musts" as there's very little consequence for him. It's a shame, but it is what it is.
Well, there's always the potential of something like a writ of mandamus being granted, or an appeal having denigrating language, and this would indeed be embarrassing, and might lower the judge's chances of ever getting promoted to an appeals court, but either of these are vanishingly rare.

I think Hardin has adequately preserved the issue for appeal. It quite simply wasn't worth a full procedural barrage.
 
I blame the lolyers for this

Before them, Russell could actually meet deadlines. But his legal knowledge is Russell see Russell do, and they taught him all about magical phrases like "continuance" or "retroactive extension" or "filing on the deadline after midnight" that he's been shitting up the docket with ever since.

Considering they were the ones who thought they could bankrupt Null, it wouldn't surprise me if they had strategy meetings with Russ, explaining that dragging out the case forever with continuances and retroactive extensions for a never ending list of increasingly stupid excuses is a good way to drain defendant's assets fighting it, as well as to infuriate and demoralize him.
 
Did I read that wrong, or are those faggots using this case to support existing law as it extends to contributory infringement?

Considering they were the ones who thought they could bankrupt Null, it wouldn't surprise me if they had strategy meetings with Russ, explaining that dragging out the case forever with continuances and retroactive extensions for a never ending list of increasingly stupid excuses is a good way to drain defendant's assets fighting it, as well as to infuriate and demoralize him.
That... makes an uncomfortable amount of sense, especially since he was filing in forma pauperis at the time.
 
Yet another live one in Cox v. Sony -- the last amicus brief in support of Sony filed last night, by "Association of American Publishers, Inc. & News/Media Alliance," highlights Greer v. Moon in their brief:
View attachment 8068558

Oh no, not mockingly!
Is this the only Greer citation that accurately sum up what the 10th found?
 
Yet another live one in Cox v. Sony -- the last amicus brief in support of Sony filed last night, by "Association of American Publishers, Inc. & News/Media Alliance," highlights Greer v. Moon in their brief:
View attachment 8068558

Oh no, not mockingly!
What these niggers neglect to mention is that the "materials" didn't exist on the site. Only a link to a Google FUCKING Drive, which actually held the material they're sperging about. It'd be one thing if it was an attachment or screenshots of the entire book, but it wasn't.

I get that they're going for more of the contributory facet. Even though that aspect goes on it's own zany, time travel logic when viewed through the lense of this case. However, the entire premise of the brief you posted, this lawsuit, the 10th circuit decision, etc., just falls off the wheels with the copyright infringement aspect.

I know Null/ Hardin have explained to the courts how Google Drive works, how URLs work, and attempted to make Google a party. I also know that the courts' response has also been "lolno" every single time. I'd kill for the court or judge to explain their rationale on this. Like, is it willful ignorance? Tech illiteracy? Pure scorn for Kiwifarms, a website? Just something so I can halfway understand their reasoning for how a URL to another website is equivalent to hosting the attachment itself, when every standard of IT logic knows otherwise.
 
Just something so I can halfway understand their reasoning for how a URL to another website is equivalent to hosting the attachment itself, when every standard of IT logic knows otherwise.
Never mind the numerous, uniformly identical contradictory cases stating specifically that links to other sites, other than in very specific circumstances, including cases EXPLICITLY about Google Drive urls, say exactly the opposite.
 
Too bad there was no way for Hardin to motion to force Google to be added as a defendant. That could have resulted in some hilarious fires being lit under some judges' asses. After all, THEY were the ones hosting the copyrighted material.

Good thing Russ hasn't realized that if he adds Google as a defendant then they'd be liable if he wins and have to pay sanctions and the like.
 
Too bad there was no way for Hardin to motion to force Google to be added as a defendant. That could have resulted in some hilarious fires being lit under some judges' asses. After all, THEY were the ones hosting the copyrighted material.

Good thing Russ hasn't realized that if he adds Google as a defendant then they'd be liable if he wins and have to pay sanctions and the like.
He did try back in Jan 2024. I'm not finding the denial right now but it was denied during the Utah->Florida->Utah mess.
Oh, there it is, September 2024. DENIED.
Partially because the 10th said "Hey, we don't need the direct infringement to do this contributory infringement thing."
 
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