Revisiting the Silvertop banana costume case

Silvertop v. Kangaroo (3d Cir. 2019) held that a banana costume was both copyrightable and infringed:

In holding that the costume was protectable, the Third Circuit reasoned:

Although a banana costume is
likely to be yellow, it could be any 
shade of yellow—or 
green or brown for that matter. Although a banana costume is likely to be curved, it need not be—let alone in any
particular manner. And although a banana costume is likely to have ends that
resemble a natural banana’s, those tips need not look like Rasta’s black tips  (in color, shape, or size).

Commenting on this reasoning, Jamie Boyle and Jennifer Jenkins said: 

So, while the court admits that a
banana costume is likely to be yellow and curved, it says it could
also be brown and straight. On Halloween, when your child goes out in her
brown, straight, banana costume and her friends ask “why are you dressed up as
stick!?” she will be able to respond with a simple, terse explanation.
Star Athletica,” she will say.

(It’s not really Star Athletica that is the direct culprit, but the court’s cramped understanding of scenes a faire/basic designs; Star Athletica just means that all the limiting work is done by idea/expression and similar doctrines, and the court misapplied Star Athletica‘s holding that the designer’s intent is irrelevant to separability to the separate issue of whether the designer did something creative/original.)

Anyway, the court has a possibly better argument: “copyrighting Rasta’s banana costume would not  effectively monopolize the underlying idea because there are many other ways to make a costume resemble a banana.  Indeed, Rasta provided over 20 non-infringing examples.”

So I decided to take a look at the record.

First, there aren’t “over 20”–there are 21 pictures, 2 of which are of a costume from Arrested Development. (I only used one of those two pictures.) Of the 20 costumes–treating minor variations as different costumes–3 are “sexy” bananas, a different 6 cover the face, 1 is a guy in a yellow suit with a hood, and 1 is an odd Wolverine. Maybe that’s still enough to justify protection for Rasta’s version, but the fact that no one noticed Wolverine in there suggests to me that principles of equity were doing more work than copyright principles.

On the other hand, the court isn’t really suggesting that noninfringing costumes need to be straight and brown or green. Yay?

 

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/09/revisiting-silvertop-banana-costume-case.html

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“natural” class certified based in part on internal acknowledgement of materiality and potential falsity

Drake v. Bayer Healthcare LLC, 2024 WL 4204921, No.
22-cv-1085-MMA (JLB) (C.D. Cal. Sept. 16, 2024)

Plaintiffs alleged that Bayer falsely advertised One A Day Natural
Fruit Bites Multivitamin products as “natural” even though they “contain
non-natural, synthetic ingredients.” They brought claims under NY and
California law. The court certified plaintiff classes. I’ll just make a few
notes.

Materiality: “[P]laintiffs must offer some means of
providing materiality and reliance by a reasonable consumer on a classwide
basis in order to certify a class.” Here, named plaintiffs’ depositions,
Bayer’s internal documents, and a materiality survey were sufficient.
Particularly notable: Bayer had internal debate about “natural.” Its senior
brand manager wrote that the “Regulatory [department] did not support” the use
of the word “natural” on the labels “based on the presence of vitamins (which
are synthetic) in the formula.” But Bayer’s vice president of marketing
mentioned that she “would keep [the word “natural”] to test …” because
“[c]onsumers loved those words …” This was enough to support, for purposes of
certification, the claims that a reasonable consumer would attach importance to
“natural” and that Bayer knew this. The survey was also fine—the battle of the
experts also created a common question of fact. With materiality comes a
presumption of reliance.

Bayer also argued that plaintiffs failed to present a
workable damages model. But “class wide damages calculations under the CLRA are
particularly forgiving[,]” because “California law requires only that some
reasonable basis of computation of damages be used, and the damages may be
computed even if the result reached is an approximation.” Plaintiffs’ expert
proposed a “choice-based conjoint survey methodology,” which will “measure the
value of an individual product attribute, such as a specific understanding of
the label” and in turn will help “determine the price premium attributable” to
the label claims. That was a well-established method for measuring classwide
damages in false advertising product label cases.

 

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/09/natural-class-certified-based-in-part.html

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Copyright preemption in trade dress claims?

Scotts Company LLC v. SBM Life Science Corp., — F.Supp.3d
—-, No. 2:23-cv-1541, 2024 WL 4217446 (S.D. Ohio Sept. 18, 2024)

Scotts makes consumer lawn, garden, pesticide, and
insecticide products, including under the “ORTHO” brand. Scotts alleged rights
in its red mark, black trade dress, black label, and yellow barrier design that
were allegedly infringed by competitor SBM’s competing products.
Unsurprisingly, the court accepts those claims on a motion to dismiss, but
seems to get the copyright preemption analysis backwards.

Scotts sufficiently alleged fame for dilution purposes.

Ortho red design mark

The allegations were, along with pictures, sufficient to
allege a defined, distinctive trade dress:

The distinctive packaging of
certain Scotts’ ORTHO control products consists of a unique arrangement of
colors, graphic elements, font styles and text, with a black background with
some lighter gradations of gray, a prominent placement of a red pentagon containing
a brand name in white lettering above horizontal information bars that start on
the left side of the label and connect into a circular or arc design that
contains an image of green plant material. One information bar is
yellowish/gold and the other information bar is silver. A product name is
placed between the pentagon design and the information bars.

Ortho black trade dress

This was sufficiently definite; it didn’t include terms like
“such as” or “for example,” which can be problematic.

However, coordinate state law claims under the Ohio
Deceptive Trade Practices Act were preempted by §301 because the alleged extra
element—the fact that the copied matter was put on products and sold on
products that compete with Scotts’—didn’t qualitatively distinguish Scotts’
copyright claim from its trade dress claim. “[B]ased on Scotts’ allegations,
the source of any likelihood of confusion—the extra element required to advance
Scotts’ state-law claims—is the same activity that forms Scotts’ copyright claim,”
so it wasn’t qualitatively different. (As TM gets more property-like, this
argument may be more attractive to courts; when “confusion” is more notional
than real, it seems less like an extra element.)

The court did find a copyright claim based on label
similarity plausible. “Each [label has] a primarily black background, lighter
gradations of gray, a prominent placement of a red pentagon containing white
lettering where the brand name is, and horizontal information bars in
yellowish/gold and silver that extend from the left side of the label to a
circular image depicting green plant material.”

accused SBM trade dress–I really can’t see substantial similarity of protectable expression here; this seems to conflate (c) and TM

The court doesn’t separately deal with the copyright claim over the yellow barrier design, which to me clearly falls on the idea side of the idea/expression line:

False advertising: Scotts challenged SBM’s advertising
statements that its Brush Killer Product kills brush for up to 12 months,
protects for up to 12 months, and provides consumers with up to 365 days of
control. Scotts alleged that the products do not provide the advertised
protection for up to 12 months or 365 days; that was sufficient to allege
falsity. At least the court is equally lenient with TM and false advertising?

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/09/copyright-preemption-in-trade-dress.html

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“Made in the USA” materiality showing requires evidence, not just interested witness testimony

Illinois Tool Works Inc. v. J-B Weld Co., No. 3:19-cv-1434
(JAM), 2024 WL 4117244 (D. Conn. Sept. 9, 2024)

The parties compete in the sale of “chemical bonding
products marketed for home and automotive use.” Here, the court kicks out
Lanham Act claims/counterclaims on summary judgment for want of materiality—for
“Made in USA” and the term “epoxy”—as well as another claim on laches grounds. The
first one’s the potential surprise, and raises evidentiary questions about hearsay that a
court in a trademark case might have seen differently.

J-B has used unqualified “Made in USA” claims in its
advertising. The parties disputed whether J-B’s silicone sealants, manufactured
by its suppliers, contain ingredients sourced from abroad and the significance
of those ingredients.

ITW advertises “the interchange between its products and the
matching OEM manufacturer products” in its materials, sometimes including OEM
interchanges for specific automotive brands in its package advertising. It also
marketed certain products as epoxies despite their not fitting the chemical
definition of an epoxy. The parties agreed that “an epoxy is a polymer
containing one or more epoxy or epoxide groups,” and that adhesives containing
epoxides are distinct from adhesives containing methyl methacrylate (“MMAs”),
and they have distinct health and safety concerns. ITW’s accused products didn’t
contain chemical epoxide groups, but it categorized them as epoxies on its
website. It took the position that, “from a marketing perspective, the
definition of an epoxy is any two-part adhesive,” regardless of its specific
chemical composition. J-B Weld disagreed and cited a few Amazon reviews in
which customers say things like “Is this epoxy or just adhesive?”; “Can anyone
tell me if this has methyl methacrylate (mma)? that’s what i want but i can’t
tell for sure”; “What is the base chemical of this glue—epoxy, methacrylate, or
polyurethane?” Some of ITW’s technical product data sheets did differentiate
between “the ‘chemical type’ of an epoxy and a non-epoxy,” identifying
differences in odor and flashpoint, among other product characteristics.

ITW didn’t submit sufficient evidence of the materiality of
“Made in USA,” offering only “two deposition excerpts in which ITW employees
offer their opinions and vague impressions on the issue.” The former director
of marketing testified that consumers “definitely” purchase products “based on
Made in the USA advertising.” He elaborated: “Because of the type of consumer
that shops for our products in general, the profile are people that highly
value Made in the USA.” He said that Walmart told his team that “made in the
USA is a priority for them.” The court deemed this hearsay and thus irrelevant
for summary judgment—but I wonder whether it could also be characterized as
evidence of the speaker’s mental state. Regardless, “[c]ourts that have deemed ‘Made
in USA’ claims material have been offered much richer evidentiary records,”
including actual retailer testimony.

In addition, ITW didn’t show actual injury; in the Second
Circuit, literal falsity alone isn’t enough to presume injury in the absence of
comparative advertising as well as direct competition. This wasn’t comparative
advertising (or a two-player market).

OEM: The court found laches; ITW had used OEM advertising
since 2001 and J-B didn’t sue until 2020. J-B argued that the relevant period
should begin in 2014, when J-B entered the market, and that it wasn’t
unreasonable for a new market entrant to wait to sue the most significant
competitor. But that still didn’t excuse six years of delay (where the relevant
state period was three years). And ITW was likely to be prejudiced “by being
forced to discontinue a marketing strategy it has relied on for so many years
and with the risk that customers will assume—in the absence of OEM labeling
claims—that the formulation of its products have changed.”

Epoxy: In J-B Weld Co., LLC v. Gorilla Glue Co., 978 F.3d
778 (11th Cir. 2020), J-B lost a false advertising claim against a different
competitor based on the competitor’s use of the term “epoxy” in advertising its
non-epoxy MMA-based product. The court of appeals reasoned that “consumers
likely categorize ‘epoxies’ as all two-part resin-and-hardener adhesives,
regardless of the chemical constitution of the resin.” It cited the testimony
of J-B’s own expert “that consumers likely only care about whether the product
sticks two surfaces together effectively.” Even if there were “safety and odor”
differences, there wasn’t a showing of materiality.

The record here wasn’t sufficiently different from that in Gorilla
Glue
. A “smattering” of Amazon reviews was insufficient to change anything.
J-B’s own CEO’s opinion about whether ITW’s epoxy claim would affect consumer
purchasing decisions didn’t help because he wasn’t qualified expert on consumer
purchasing decisions, and “his self-interested opinion about consumer
purchasing decisions exceeds the limits of permissible lay opinion testimony
that must be based on a witness’s own sensory perception.”

In the alternative, J-B also failed to show injury from
either the OEM or epoxy advertising. Its 30(b)(6) witness testified that various
retailer customers told them that J-B was losing business because ITW used
“OEM” labels and J-B didn’t, but that was hearsay. Even nominal damages
required evidence of injury.

 

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/09/made-in-usa-materiality-showing.html

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Engagement rings in the news

 I’m quoted in this story about a dispute in front of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court this week. In the courts of talking to the reporter, I learned that there have been a couple more state supreme court cases since I last looked, including one, Cummins v. Goolsby, 255 So.3d 1257 (Miss. 2018), in which the court refused to follow the no-fault, man always gets the ring back rule, but only because he was still married to someone else when he gave her the ring. (You can read my student note on the topic, of which I’m still very proud, here.)

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/09/engagement-rings-in-news.html

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DC Court of Appeals revives greenwashing suit against Coca-Cola

Earth Island Institute v. Coca-Cola Co., — A.3d —-, 2024
WL 3976560, No. 22-CV-0895 (D.C. Aug. 29, 2024)

Earth Island sued Coca-Cola under the D.C. Consumer
Protection Procedures Act, alleging that Coca-Cola engages in deceptive
marketing that “misleads consumers into thinking that its business is
environmentally sustainable, or at least that it is currently making serious
strides toward environmental sustainability.” In fact, Earth Island alleged, “the
sheer scale on which Coca-Cola relies on single-use plastics in its
packaging—and the scale on which it intends to continue using them—renders it
an environmental blight and a fundamentally unsustainable business.” Coca-Cola
touts its efforts to increase recyclability and use more recycled material, but
this allegedly hid “the reality that recycling is not a viable means of
mitigating the environmental harm that Coca-Cola inflicts via its mass
production of single-use plastics—less than ten percent of recyclable plastics
are in fact recycled in the United States.” Coca-Cola allegedly “represents
itself as working toward environmental sustainability, despite no serious
intention of doing the one thing that could actually achieve that goal:
severely scaling down its plastic production.”

The court first found that Earth Justice had standing under
DC law (the DC courts are not Article III federal courts). Despite the
patchwork of sources—Twitter, the Coca-Cola website, other places—from which
the complaint quoted, it was plausible that the general public targeted by the
ads, including in DC, received the basic message “that Coca-Cola is a company
that cares about, and is working meaningfully toward, environmental
sustainability” even if no one person saw all the ads.

Reversing the trial court, DC’s highest court held that this
greenwashing complaint stated a claim.

The most concrete statements outlined Coca-Cola’s goals: (1)
“Make 100% of our packaging recyclable globally by 2025. Use at least 50%
recycled material in our packaging by 2030” And (2) “Part of our sustainability
plan is to help collect and recycle a bottle or can for every one we sell
globally by 2030.” Vaguer statements were more in the vein: “Business and
sustainability are not separate stories for The Coca-Cola Company—but different
facets of the same story.” And Coca-Cola cosigned a statement from the American
Beverage Association: “Together, we’re committed to getting every bottle back.
… Our goal is for every bottle to become a new bottle, and not end up in
oceans, rivers, beaches and landfills. … This unprecedented commitment
includes … [p]artnering with [other organizations] to improve recycling
access, provide education to residents and modernize the recycling
infrastructure in communities across the country.”

Earth Island specifically alleged that Coca-Cola wasn’t taking
the steps necessary to meet its concrete benchmarks of (1) making 100% of its
packaging recyclable by 2025, (2) using 50% recycled material in its packaging
by 2030, and (3) recycling a bottle or can for every one it sells by 2030. And,
it argues, Coca-Cola has a “history of making sustainability promises and
failing to deliver on them,” which is “a history that is bound to repeat itself
given that none of Coca-Cola’s business plans or lobbying efforts would enable
it to actually achieve its alleged recycling goals.” Also, given low recycling
rates, even if Coca-Cola could hit the benchmark of making 100% of its
packaging recyclable by 2025, it would allegedly still be “push[ing]
ineffective ‘recycling’ as a viable tool to assuage their environmental
pollution.”

The trial court thought that the challenged statements were
merely aspirational/puffery.  But “even
aspirational statements can be actionable under the CPPA because they can
convey to reasonable consumers that a speaker is taking (or intends to take)
steps that at least have the potential of fulfilling those aspirations. Earth
Island alleges that Coca-Cola neither takes nor intends to take any such steps,
and if that is correct, then its representations could mislead reasonable
consumers.”

It was facially plausible that

(1) Coca-Cola is a fundamentally
unsustainable business because of its heavy reliance on single-use plastics
that it has no immediate intentions of eliminating or substantially reducing;
(2) Coca-Cola misleads consumers into thinking that it is serious about hitting
its specific sustainability goals, when its practices say otherwise; and (3)
Coca-Cola’s statements create the misimpression that recycling is a viable
method for substantially mitigating the harm its plastic products cause to the
environment, when it is not.

The court analogized to marketing “light” or “low tar”
cigarettes; marketing them as a healthier option was misleading when they didn’t
offer much if any benefit versus full tar and when they posed substantial
health dangers. Given how Coca-Cola promotes its “World Without Waste”
initiative and trumpets how it is “[s]caling sustainability solutions,” “a
reasonable consumer could plausibly think that its recycling efforts will put a
serious dent in its environmental impacts.” But Earth Island plausibly alleged
that it wouldn’t given low recycling rates of recyclable plastics. “That is,
when it promotes its recycling efforts, it omits the fact that those efforts
will not prevent the vast bulk of its plastic products from ending up as waste
or pollution, a deception that Earth Island alleges Coca-Cola very much
intends.” Likewise, it was plausible that “a reasonable consumer would think
Coca-Cola was taking the steps necessary to achieve its stated goals,” and it
allegedly was not.

Of course, this was all subject to proof:

We do not presume to know what
reasonable consumers understand a company to mean when it claims that it is
working to be “more sustainable” or the like. For all we know, reasonable
consumers would immediately dismiss that type of speech as vacuous corporate
jargon, not to be relied upon. But that is not obviously true; the concerted
efforts that companies like Coca-Cola make to cultivate an image of being
environmentally friendly strongly suggests that even their vague assurances
have a real impact on consumers. Further, even if reasonable consumers take
Coca-Cola’s statements to mean that it is taking substantial strides to improve
the environment, it is not at all obvious at this stage of the proceedings
whether Coca-Cola’s efforts on the ground align with those statements. But
those are questions of proof that cannot be settled at the motion to dismiss
stage.

So, puffery was still an issue, but it was an issue for the
factfinder.

The court rejected “more rigid approaches” to puffery, such
as that where a statement’s “truth or falsity … cannot be precisely
determined,” it is puffery. But the cited case that puffery includes “the
exaggerations reasonably to be expected of a seller as to the degree of quality
of his product, the truth or falsity of which cannot be precisely determined.” The
first part of that definition—reasonably expected exaggerations—was vital to
the second. “[B]usinesses cannot insulate themselves from suit simply by
avoiding concrete claims. Vague and ambiguous statements, incapable of being
strictly true or false, may yet be actionable as misrepresentations.” The court
here preferred defining puffery as (1) “general claim[s] of superiority … so
vague that [they] can be understood as nothing more than a mere expression of
opinion,” and (2) “exaggerated, blustering, and boasting statement[s],” quite
capable of being adjudged false, but “upon which no reasonable buyer would be
justified in relying.” “Red Bull gives you wings” can’t be taken literally, but
“might be actionable if it gave reasonable consumers the impression that Red
Bell provided significant benefits over a cup of coffee or caffeine pill, at
least if that were not the case.” In short, “statements that might be deemed
puffery if interpreted to mean one thing in one context, might very well be
actionable misrepresentations if taken to mean a different thing in a different
context. The doctrine is not conducive to hard-and-fast rules, and typically
raises a question for the factfinder.”

The court also rejected Bimbo Bakeries USA, Inc. v.
Sycamore, 29 F.4th 630 (10th Cir. 2022), which overturned a jury verdict
finding that a bakery engaged in false advertising when it billed baked goods
it sold in Utah as “local,” despite the fact that they were made exclusively
out-of-state, as far away as Alaska. The Bimbo Bakeries court concluded
that the word “local” was “an indeterminate and unverifiable adjective,” so it
was not any “description of fact,” because “the word local cannot be ‘adjudged
true or false in a way that admits of empirical verification.’ ” Of course “local”
has a range of meanings.

[I]t is just as obviously true that
some things fall outside that range of meanings, often depending on context. To
illustrate, here in the District, if somebody says they support the “local” NFL
team, you would most naturally think they are supporters of the Washington
Commanders, though they might also fairly be referring to the Baltimore Ravens,
given that Baltimore is less than forty miles away (i.e., there’s a range that
“local” might fairly apply to). But if they are in fact fans of the Los Angeles
Rams—a team that hails from more than two thousand miles from here (just as
some of the baked goods in Bimbo Bakeries came from Alaska, more than two
thousand miles away from Utah)—then they have undoubtedly deceived you.

The court here also specifically rejected Bimbo Bakeries’s
“hostility toward consumer survey evidence as one viable evidentiary tool for
discerning how reasonable consumers understand various advertisements.” The
court further noted that the Fifth Circuit’s analysis in Papa John’s
contradicted Bimbo BakeriesPapa John’s held that even a claim as
vague and opinion-laced as “Better ingredients. Better Pizza.” could be
actionable “when coupled with a comparison to a competitor’s ingredients that
were not discernibly different.”

Nor was it dispositive that the statements were
aspirational. An aspirational statement can be reasonably “interpreted to be a
representation about the defendant’s present intent … to act as stated.” Mere
failure to achieve stated goals couldn’t support a misrepresentation claim, but
a showing that Coca-Cola never even intended to do anything that could achieve
them would.

Coca-Cola next argued that the statements at issue weren’t
about “goods and services” as required by the CPPA. But claims about plastic
packaging were very much about “goods and services,” defined broadly in the law
to include “any and all parts of the economic output of society, at any stage
or related … in the economic process.”

Finally, the statements could properly be considered in the
aggregate, although a litigant would not be allowed to “unfairly strip isolated
statements out of their context and then cobble them together to form an
unrepresentative tapestry of what has been conveyed.” Earth Island was
targeting only statements that Coca-Cola was still making today. Discovery and
trial could be reasonably tailored to those. Earth Island was not offering a “grab
bag” of statements nor arguing that they should be read out of context. “Businesses
can drive points home through repetition or supplementation, and where a
consumer sees Coca-Cola billing itself as sustainable in one ad on a Monday,
and then sees a different ad on Thursday with a similar message, the mere
repetition of a point can have a cumulative effect on a reasonable consumer.”
Maybe consumers wouldn’t have reacted that way, maybe not; “[i]t is plausible
enough that a consumer curious about Coca-Cola’s environmental impacts would
come across the variety of statements relied upon by Earth Island through some
casual Googling.”

The First Amendment didn’t bar the suit. Earth Island challenged
Coca-Cola’s commercial speech about its goods and services, although relief
would have to preserve its First Amendment rights.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/08/dc-court-of-appeals-revives.html

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FTC lacks jurisdiction over nonprofits, even sham ones, court rules

Federal Trade Commission v. Grand Canyon Education, Inc.,
— F.Supp.3d —-, 2024 WL 3825087, No. CV-23-02711-PHX-DWL (D. Ariz. Aug. 15,
2024)

The court here holds that the FTC lacks §5 jurisdiction over
a nonprofit, even if the nonprofit was in fact a sham diverting money to its
controller. I wonder if the FTC will appeal, or accept the court’s
baby-splitting of allowing it to sue the principal controller.

The FTC sued Grand Canyon Education, Inc.; Grand Canyon
University; and Mueller, GCU’s president and GCE’s CEO and chairman of the
board, for (1) making deceptive representations concerning GCU’s status as a
non-profit institution; (2) making deceptive representations concerning GCU’s
doctoral programs; (3) making both sets of deceptive representations in
connection with the telemarketing of educational services; (4) initiating
telemarketing calls to persons who requested that GCU not contact them; and (5)
initiating telemarketing calls to persons registered on the national
Do-Not-Call Registry.

Nonprofit allegations: In 2004, GCE—which became a publicly
traded company—purchased what is now GCU and began operating it as a for-profit
institution. In 2014, GCE chartered GCU as an Arizona nonprofit corporation.
Mueller has continuously been in charge since 2017. He received salary,
bonuses, and other compensation from both GCU and GCE. His compensation included
cash and stock incentives linked to GCE’s financial performance. Despite GCU’s
classification as a nonprofit, the FTC alleged that it “was, in fact, organized
by GCE and Defendant Mueller to advance GCE’s for-profit business and advance
Defendant Mueller’s interests as officer, chairman, director, stockholder and
promoter of investment in GCE” and therefore is “operated to carry on business
for its own profit or that of its members, within the meaning of Section 4 of
the FTC Act.”

In 2018, GCE transferred the trademarks, campus, and certain
assets and liabilities of the institution that GCE had operated as ‘Grand
Canyon University,’ to GCU in exchange for GCU agreeing to pay GCE more than
$870 million plus 6% annual interest.” A master services agreement “executed as
part of this transaction makes GCE the service provider for certain essential
GCU operations in exchange for a bundled fee that is equal to 60% of GCU’s
‘Adjusted Gross Revenue.’ ” GCE has since been the exclusive marketing provider
for GCU, responsible for communicating with prospective GCU students regarding
applications, program requirements, and financing options. GCE is also the
exclusive provider for GCU of student support services and counseling,
technology (including GCU’s platform for online education) and budget analysis
services. GCU isn’t permitted to contract with any third party for these
services. And GCE is the sole provider of GCU’s student records management,
curriculum services, accounting services, technology services, financial aid
services, human resources services, procurement, and faculty payroll and
training.”

The fees are allegedly not limited and not proportionate to
GCE’s costs: “GCE receives 60% of GCU’s revenue from tuition and fees from
students, including 60% of charitable contributions to GCU for payment of
student tuition and fees. … In addition, GCE does not provide services for
student housing, food services, operation of the GCU hotel conference center,
or athletic arena, but still receives 60% of the revenue from these operations.”
GCU has consistently generated profit for GCE, and is GCE’s most significant
source of revenue.

Nonetheless, defendants allegedly promoted GCU in
advertising and telemarketing as a private ‘nonprofit’ university and
disseminated digital and print advertising” suggesting that “GCU had gone ‘Back
to Non-Profit Roots’ and ‘transitioned back to a nonprofit institution.’ ” Mueller
said in 2018 that “the characterization of GCU as a non-profit educational
institution is a tremendous advantage. We can recruit in high schools that
would not let us in the past. We’re just 90 days into this, but we’re experiencing,
we believe, a tailwind already just because of how many students didn’t pick up
the phone because we were for-profit.” He made a similar statement in 2019
during a GCE earnings call attributing unexpectedly good new student online
growth to the non-profit advertising.

In 2019, the US Department of Education “rejected GCU’s
request that it be recognized as a nonprofit institution under the Higher
Education Act, and classified GCU as a for-profit participant in federal
education programs.” The DOE also ordered GCU to cease advertising “nonprofit”
status. Defendants mostly complied.  

Telemarketing: GCE has hundreds of sales reps who engage in
telemarketing GCU. It has initiated tens of millions of telemarketing calls on
behalf of GCU. It allegedly did not respect either individual do not call
requests or the National Do Not Call Registry, making more than a million calls
in defiance thereof.

Doctoral program: The FTC alleged that defendants marketed “‘accelerated’
programs that enable students to quickly complete their degree, including
quickly completing a dissertation.” Its materials allegedly described the GCU
programs as twenty course programs that require a total of 60 credits. For
example, an enrollment agreement for a “Doctor of Business Administration:
Marketing (Qualitative Research)” stated the program costs $702 per credit,
lists a “Total Program Tuition and Fees” of “$43,720” based on the 60 credits,
and also stated that “[p]rogram cost is estimated based on current tuition
rates and fees.” The FTC alleged that this was misleading:

GCU’s requirements for
dissertations include eight distinct levels of review that students must
complete from the initial prospectus to final approval. Throughout the
multi-level review process, GCU requires students to produce multiple drafts
with extensive revisions. After a student has completed two years of
coursework, GCU appoints one or more faculty members to supervise satisfaction
of the requirements. GCU often imposes these dissertation requirements in
courses after the three dissertation courses listed in the agreements and
requires any student satisfying these requirements to enroll in, and pay
additional tuition for, ‘continuation courses.’ … The number of continuation
courses and time required for doctoral students to advance through GCU’s
doctoral program depends, in substantial part, on services provided by GCU.
Students’ ability to satisfy GCU’s requirements may be, and has been, thwarted and
delayed by GCU’s actions or inaction, such as reassignment of faculty,
inconsistent demands during the dissertation review process, and delays caused
by the conduct of faculty appointed by GCU to various roles in the dissertation
review process.

In practice, the FTC alleged, GCU rarely awarded a doctoral
degree after 60 credits. The average number of courses GCU required for
graduates awarded degrees over 2019-2022 was 31—at a cost of over $10,000 to
each student. And, unsurprisingly, “[m]ost of the students that enroll in GCU
doctoral programs never receive the doctoral degree for which they enrolled.
Many of these students are thwarted because they cannot afford the additional
costs and time necessary to fulfill GCU’s requirements beyond the twenty
courses identified as required.” Any disclosures, the FTC alleged, were
insufficient.

The court initially rejected a constitutional challenge to
the FTC’s enforcement authority. The Supreme Court both explicitly upheld the
constitutionality of the FTC’s commission structure in Humphrey’s Executor v.
United States, 295 U.S. 602 (1935), and explicitly distinguished its more
recent holding on the President’s removal power as to single-head agencies
therefrom, Seila Law LLC v. CFPB, 591 U.S. 197 (2020). Unlike some other
district courts I could name, the court here thought those cases—along with
binding circuit precedent specifically upholding the FTC’s post-1935 expanded
enforcement powers as constitutional—meant that it wasn’t going to toss out those
enforcement powers. Pointedly, the court noted that even the Fifth Circuit has
yet to go so far. Illumina, Inc. v. FTC, 88 F.4th 1036 (5th Cir. 2023)
(“[A]lthough the FTC’s powers may have changed since Humphrey’s Executor was
decided, the question of whether the FTC’s authority has changed so
fundamentally as to render Humphrey’s Executor no longer binding is for the
Supreme Court, not us, to answer.”).

However, GCU’s argument that it wasn’t a “corporation” under
the FTC and the Telemarketing Sales Rule fared better.

The FTC has jurisdiction over “persons, partnerships, or
corporations.” As to that last, it only covers a company/trust/association that
is “organized to carry on business for its own profit or that of its members.”
The FTC responded that it sufficiently alleged that GCU was, in fact,
for-profit “because it was organized to, and does, benefit its for-profit
founder, GCE, and President, Defendant Mueller” and because “[a] genuine
nonprofit does not siphon its earnings to its founder, or the members of its board,
or their families, or anyone else fairly to be described as an insider.” 

The key question: was GCU “organized to carry on business
for its own profit or that of its members”? The FTC argued that the answer was
yes, because it was set up and operated for profit. But the court didn’t think
that was the same thing as “organized” for profit. After all, GCU, had a
nonprofit charter under state law, and its “articles of incorporation …
represent that it is organized and operated exclusively for charitable,
religious, and scientific purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code.”

Does the FTC’s authority depend on state corporation filings
or IRS status? In a footnote, the court acknowledged that several courts have
agreed with the FTC that it doesn’t, but the court here disagreed because
“organized” for profit is not the same as “operated” for profit. [Not a very
consumer-protection-friendly interpretation of the law.]

Congress has specified in other contexts (that is, the tax
law itself) that an entity should be treated as a nonprofit only if it was both
“organized” as a nonprofit and thereafter “operated” as a nonprofit. But it only
authorized the FTC to pursue claims against an entity that is “organized to
carry on business for its own profit or that of its members.” That at least
raised an inference that the certificate of incorporation did determine
the FTC’s authority.

Still, GCU was willing to rely on a narrower argument, which
was that the FTC didn’t make the necessary showing that GCU was in fact
organized to profit itself or its members. Mueller wasn’t actually a member of
GCU. The court didn’t accept the FTC’s theory that, if an ostensible nonprofit
entity is being operated to benefit “insiders,” “related … businesses,” or
“officers” that are not members, it qualifies as a company “organized to carry
on business for its own profit” within the meaning of the FTCA. But this theory
had never been adopted by a court and the court found that, while “debatable,”
the better plain-language meaning was that it wasn’t a viable theory. Congress
could have said that the law covered fake nonprofits; the tax code specifically
requires an evaluation of whether any “part of the net earnings” of an asserted
nonprofit charity “inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or
individual.” “Although there may be persuasive policy reasons why the FTC
should be allowed to pursue claims against nonprofits that operate for the benefit
of non-member insiders, related businesses, and officers, the Court must take
the statute as written.”

The statutory reference to the corporation’s “own” profit
couldn’t be extended to “insiders,” “related businesses,” or “officers.” [I’m
not sure there’s consistency in the greater law of agency, but I am pretty sure
that for some purposes, agency law is totally happy to make this attribution.]
That was “a seemingly unlimited list of third-party beneficiaries” and would
make “own” superfluous.

This result kicked out both §5 and TSR claims against GCU.

But there were still claims against Mueller. Mueller argued
that the “nonprofit” statements were truthful, because GCU was “organized as a
nonprofit under Arizona law and recognized by the IRS as a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt
entity.” The DOE’s disagreement, they argued, was not relevant or material, and
students couldn’t have been deceived before the DOE ordered defendants to stop
the ads.

The court allowed the claims to proceed. The FTC disputed
whether the IRS had found GCU to be a nonprofit at the time defendants marketed
it as one, and argued that the Arizona Corporation Commission and Higher
Learning Commission never made an actual finding that GCU qualified as a
nonprofit. “If, as the FTC seems to contend, Defendants made false
representations to the IRS to secure GCU’s nonprofit classification,” then
there wouldn’t be a binding government determination of status.

Additionally, FTCA liability turns on misleadingness to a
reasonable consumer. Whatever the legal niceties, whether “nonprofit”
advertising meant something other than the legal definition to students and was
deceptive needed factual development. Mueller’s own statements “easily
suffice[d]” to raise a plausible inference of materiality.

Doctoral degree misrepresentations: Mueller argued that
there was no deceptiveness because GCU tells students the doctoral programs
usually require additional coursework. All the representations referred to 20
courses/60 credits as a minimum, and they said a doctoral degree could
be completed in less than seven years, not that it typically is. The FTC
pointed out that the complaint identified a lot of 20 courses/60 credits
claims, including enrollment agreements listing “ ‘Total Program Credits 60,’
and ‘Total Tuition Program and Fees:’ followed by a dollar figure based on the
tuition and fees for twenty courses.” And it pointed out that disclaimers that
don’t work don’t stop deceptiveness. The court agreed that there was a factual
issue, despite some “non-actionable puffery” in the allegations related to an “accelerated
path” to a doctorate.

The court also noted that, although some of the challenged
representations appeared on GCU’s website and GCU was now out of the case, the
allegations that GCE prepared all marketing materials plausibly kept the
website in.

The court declined to require the TSR claims to meet the
heightened pleading requirement of Rule 9(b), although it noted that the
allegations were specific enough to do so. The FTC’s claims generally didn’t
require knowledge of falsity or intent to defraud.

Individual claims against Mueller: There were no allegations
in the complaint specific to his role in crafting GCE’s challenged
representations concerning GCU’s doctoral degree requirements or addressing his
knowledge of the alleged inaccuracy of those representations. Individual
monetary liability for a corporation’s violations of § 5 of the FTC Act
requires proof of both (1) authority to control the challenged representations
and (2) some degree of awareness of, or reckless disregard concerning, the
challenged representations. The FTC plausibly alleged (1) because he was GCE’s
CEO. And there were extensive allegations about Mueller’s role in structuring
the operations of GCU and GCE and overseeing the operations of both entities in
his roles as president (of GCU) and CEO and chairman of the board (of GCE). That
was sufficient to plausibly establish knowledge or recklessness for purposes of individual liability at the pleading stage.

In addition, “when the FTC seeks injunctive relief against
an individual based on corporate-entity violations, the only required showing
is that the individual participated directly in the violations or had authority
to control the entity.”

The same analysis applied to individual liability for TSR
violations.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/08/ftc-lacks-jurisdiction-over-nonprofits.html

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Organic search results aren’t TM “use”

Alsa Refinish LLC v. Walmart Inc., 2024 WL 3914512, No.
2:23-cv-08536-SVW-MAR (C.D. Cal. Jul. 31, 2024)

In 2024, people are still bringing keyword advertising
cases. Walmart wins summary judgment.

Alsa sells paint, including chrome paint, and claims
common-law rights in  “Alsa,” “Alsa
Chrome Paint,” “Alsa Easy Chrome,” “Easy Chrome,” “Mirrachrome,” and “Mirra
chrome.” Walmart offers an online marketplace on which it and third parties
sell products. There are no infringing products on Walmart.com. Thus, searching
Walmart’s website with Alsa’s claimed marks results in search listings that
aren’t related to Alsa.

Still, Alsa argued that Walmart was using its marks in
advertising in confusing ways. Walmart does pay for keyword ads. It does not
pay for organic search listings.  

Presumably because Walmart is a big seller, a search for the
term “easy chrome paint walmart” results in several sponsored links to products
on Walmart.com along with an organic link for a Walmart webpage named “Easy
Chrome Paint,” and a search for “walmart alsa easy chrome paint” results in a
Walmart webpage named “Alsa Easy Chrome.”

“easy chrome paint walmart” search with sponsored Walmart results and organic result

Google result for “walmart alsa easy chrome paint” showing organic Walmart result “Alsa Easy Chrome(256)”

But Alsa couldn’t identify any sponsored keyword ads that
used Alsa’s marks. Walmart did bid $0.45 for the phrase “Alsa Chrome Paint,”
but received zero impressions as a result. Alsa focused on organic search
results. Those organic results were

the same webpages one would arrive
at by navigating to Walmart.com and entering the alleged Marks (e.g., “Alsa
Easy Chrome”) into Walmart’s own search bar. This happens because when a term
is entered into the search bar on Walmart’s website, the URL (i.e., the web
address) for the Walmart search results page will often include the terms that
were searched. For example, when a user searches “Alsa Chrome Paint” on
Walmart.com, the URL for the search results page is listed as follows:
https://ift.tt/FRJYcZX. A Walmart search
results page such as this will periodically be “indexed” by Google so that the
page appears on Google’s own search results.

If a user clicks on the organic result, they will go to the
same page on Walmart.com that they would have gotten to by putting the same
phrase in the Walmart search bar.

 Under 9th
Circuit precedent, a court can conclude that summary judgment in a keyword case
is appropriate “without delving into any factors other than: (1) the type of
goods and the degree of care likely to be exercised by the purchaser; and (2)
the labeling and appearance of the products for sale and the surrounding
context on the screen displaying the results page.”

First, “[b]ecause Walmart does not pay search engines to
return organic search results or index webpages, it does not ‘use’ the marks in
connection with the sale or advertisement of goods.” The fact that Google
sometimes indexed search result pages on Walmart didn’t change that. “Plaintiff
does not show that the alleged Marks appear anywhere else on Walmart.com apart
from where they are inputted as search terms. Walmart’s website does not label
any of its products under the alleged Marks or contain any infringing products.
Ultimately, Plaintiff has pointed out no evidence that Walmart did anything to
appear on these unsponsored Google search results.”

As to “Alsa Chrome Paint,” there were no clicks, meaning no
infringement was possible.

As to Walmart-sponsored results to the query “easy chrome
paint Walmart,” the court agreed with Walmart that those links were not
triggered by use of “easy chrome,” but by the separate words “easy,” “chrome,”
and “paint.” (I would think “Walmart” probably also played some role in triggering Walmart-sponsored results.) This too did not constitute a “use” of Alsa’s putative mark. Even
assuming that it did, running sponsored ads in response to a Google search for
“easy chrome paint Walmart” didn’t cause likely confusion.

There was no source confusion because Walmart didn’t sell
any infringing products. There was also no initial interest confusion.
Plaintiff’s cheapest product was $59, and “chrome paint products appear to be
specialized or even ‘sophisticated’ items rather than everyday goods.” A
reasonably prudent consumer accustomed to shopping online would exercise
greater care. Moreover, each Walmart product in Google’s “sponsored” results was
clearly labeled with the name of the product along with a photograph, and with
the word “Walmart.” None of the sponsored products made any reference to the
phrase “Easy Chrome” or the other putative marks. And finally, the sponsored
results were “clearly distinguishable from objective search results.” Thus,
confusion was unlikely.

Dilution also failed for want of “use.”

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/08/organic-search-results-arent-tm-use.html

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6th Circuit applies JDI to political speech, but holds that disclaimers avoid confusion

Libertarian National Committee, Inc. v. Saliba, No. 23-1856
(6th Cir. Aug. 28, 2024)

Dissenting members of the Libertarian Party of Michigan
maintain that they are the true Michigan affiliate. The Libertarian National
Committee sued and the district court enjoined them from using the Libertarian
Party mark. In an opinion that follows JDI in insisting that “use as a
mark” is the appropriate speech-protective line, the court of appeals mostly
affirms, though it vacates the injunction as to fundraising that uses a pop-up
disclaimer to inform donors of the substance of the dispute, which the court of
appeals finds avoids likely confusion. [This is probably best understood as a
normative version of “reasonable consumers wouldn’t be confused.”]

Defendants, even after the dispute began, kept identifying
themselves as the Libertarian Party of Michigan in connection with soliciting
donations, filing campaign finance paperwork, and promulgating platform
positions, endorsements, and commentary critical of the Chadderdon-chaired
group. The core holding: “[D]efendants’ use of the LNC’s mark to, among other
things, solicit party donations, fill out campaign finance paperwork, advertise
events, and espouse political platform positions and commentary falls within
the scope of the Lanham Act.” “Services” are broadly defined, and the Lanham
Act reaches noncommercial speech at least to the extent of covering uses as a
mark. Although prior cases protecting noncommercial/political actors have
sometimes reasoned that political positions etc. aren’t “services” within the
scope of the Act, they are better understood as in fact standing for the
principle that, for example, discussing and critiquing the trademark owner is
not a source-identifying use

For what it’s worth, this distinction roughly
tracks my
pre-JDI proposal
to focus on whether reasonable citizens can tell who
is speaking
when it comes to noncommercial speech, although my version
notably relies on traditional First Amendment tiers of scrutiny and—perhaps
foretelling coming Supreme Court moves—the court here does not. This is going
to create further doctrinal crinkles when trademark owners assert that noncommercial uses cause
sponsorship/affiliation confusion; one of the merits of tiers of scrutiny, which can concededly be replicated by other methods with which modern courts have less experience, is that they provide a framework for assessing the strength of the relevant interests and the fit between a particular imposition of liability and those interests.

“[I]n the narrow context where a defendant uses the
trademark as a source identifier, the Lanham Act does not offend the First
Amendment by imposing liability in the political arena.” The court is right to
say that the results of previous cases, if not their language/statutory
interpretation, are relatively consistent with the line it draws—if you agree
that none of the previously protected uses, including domain names like
taubmansucks.com, were “source-identifying” if they didn’t sell (competing?)
goods. But what this means is that now most of the speech-protective work will
be done in the “source-identifying” inquiry. This is easy with people calling
themselves the Libertarian Party, and has been relatively easy for courts
dealing with individual “articles” (how the court describes both Farah v.
Esquire Magazine, 736 F.3d 528 (D.C. Cir. 2013), and the Radiance Foundation
“National Association for the Abortion of Colored People” case). But
plaintiffs will adapt, and it might not stay easy for lots of representational
art.

Thus, without going into factor analysis, the court of
appeals found that most of the challenged uses were unauthorized and likely to
be confusing. However:

Defendants also used the LNC’s
trademark on their website to solicit donations. In connection with the
donation tab, defendants displayed one of two pop-up disclaimers notifying the
potential donor of the governance dispute, the LNC’s recognition of the Chadderdon-led
faction, and that any donations would be going solely to defendants. The
disclaimers also included hyperlinks to the Chadderdon-led affiliate’s website.
By clearly explaining the identity of the donation recipient, these disclaimers
ameliorated the confusion the Lanham Act seeks to prevent. The disclaimers also
resemble those we have previously found sufficient to eliminate a likelihood of
confusion. Accordingly, defendants’ use of the trademark in connection with
their online solicitation of donations, when accompanied by appropriate
disclaimers, does not create a sufficient likelihood of confusion as to the
recipient of the funds and thus cannot be the predicate for Lanham Act
liability.

Query: are defendants therefore entitled to a modification
of the injunction to allow them to apply the same disclaimers to other things
they do, like running the rest of the website or sending materials to
officials?

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/08/6th-circuit-applies-jdi-to-political.html

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unexplained “3x more cutting power” could be false advertising when comparator was unexpected

Fiskars Finland OY AB v. Woodland Tools Inc., No. 22-cv-540-jdp,
2024 WL 3936444 (W.D. Wis. Aug. 26, 2024)

The parties compete in the hand-held gardening tool market. Most
of the claims failed on summary judgment, but part of Woodland’s claim against
Fiskars for false advertising, based on Fiskars’s statements about the cutting
power of its tools, and some of its statements that certain products were
designed in the United States, did create factual issues for trial. (Unsurprisingly,
this is a former employee case with many different claims, most of which I will
ignore, including design patent claims that fail because no reasonable jury
could find the protectable elements confusingly similar in light of the prior
art.)

Fiskars alleged that Woodland engaged in false advertising when
it described its Regular Duty Bypass Pruner as “designed in the USA” because Woodland
actually copied Fiskars’s version of the tool—which would mean that Woodland
did not design its tools at all. Fiskars presented no evidence of consumer
deception, and didn’t show literal falsity. “Woodand’s founders testified that
they designed at least some part of every Woodland product in the United
States, and Fiskars does not offer any evidence to contest that testimony.”

Woodland’s false advertising counterclaims focused on: (1)
statements that certain Fiskars products will cut three times easier or with up
to three times more power; (2) statements that its products are designed in the
United States; and (3) statements about certain Fiskars products having a
titanium blade coating.

Fiskars first argued that Woodland had no statutory right to
bring any false advertising claims prior to January 2022, because it could not
have suffered any injury from the alleged false advertising before its entry
into the market. But Lexmark didn’t preclude this claim. [Weird
misdescription of Lexmark follows, but I don’t think it bears on the correctness
of the ultimate conclusion.] There was no dispute here that Woodland was a
direct competitor “within the zone of interests protected by the statute” whose
alleged harm of delayed entry into the market has “a sufficiently close
connection to the conduct that statute prohibits” to satisfy the proximate
cause requirement for standing. Still, it was common sense that injury didn’t
occur before Woodland existed as a company, so it would have to show post-existence
evidence of harm to win. And that would also influence any disgorgement award. Still,
conduct before Woodland entered the market was relevant to the claim.

Fiskars advertises some of its products as having “up to 3x
more cutting power.” Woodland alleged that this statement and similar “2x” or
“3x” power-based claims were ambiguous and misleading to consumers because the
advertisements/packages didn’t identify what other tools Fiskars’s tools are
more powerful than. Ambiguity means consumer confusion evidence is required.
Woodland’s survey expert used a test stimulus with the advertised statement “up
to 3X more power,” along with a control statement that said, “more power than
non-geared tools.” The survey found that, compared to control, an additional
20.1 percent of respondents interpreted the phrase to mean that the advertised
tool has up to 3X more cutting power than earlier versions of Fiskars’s product
or other competitive products on the market. A reasonable jury could accept
this as evidence of deceptiveness. And a reasonable jury could generalize from
the one product he tested to the effects of similar phrases such as “cuts 3X
easier” and “3X more cutting power.”

Woodlands also challenged packaging stating that certain
products are “designed in the United States,” when those specific products
weren’t. Fiskars argued that the statements couldn’t be literally false because
the term “designed” is ambiguous.  

As to one product, Fiskars admitted it was designed in
Finland. And Fiskars didn’t identify multiple reasonable interpretations of “designed.”
In the context of manufacturing a product, design means to “decide upon the
look and functioning of (a building, garment, or other object), typically by
making a detailed drawing or it.” There were genuine disputes of fact on where
other products were designed, although not when the only piece of evidence of
non-US design was a utility patent listed on the package as covering the
product, whose inventors/assignee were all located in Finland. “But the
location of an inventor or assignee of a patent does not necessarily dictate
where the commercial embodiments of the patent are designed.”

Fiskars also advertises seven of its products as having a
titanium blade coating. Woodland’s blade coating testing showed that the
products at issue in this claim had less than seven percent titanium in the
coating. But the phrase “titanium blade coating” had more than one reasonable
interpretation. “It could plausibly mean either that the coating is made
entirely of titanium or that the coating contains some amount of titanium,
mixed with other compounds that make up the coating.” And Fiskars did satisfy
the second meaning. There was no evidence of consumer confusion.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/08/unexplained-3x-more-cutting-power-could.html

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