Skip to main content
Menu Icon
Close

InfoBytes Blog

Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

9th Circuit: Networking site cannot deny data scraping access to publicly available profiles

Privacy/Cyber Risk & Data Security Courts Appellate Ninth Circuit Cyber Risk & Data Security Computer Fraud and Abuse Act Data Scraping

Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security

On April 18, on remand from the U.S. Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court’s order preliminarily enjoining a professional networking site from denying a data analytics company access to publicly available member profiles. At issue are allegations brought by the networking site claiming the data analytics company used automated bots to extract user data from the networking site’s website (a process known as “scraping”) for the purposes of selling its analytics services to businesses. The networking site sent the data analytics company a cease-and-desist letter, asserting violations of state and federal law, including the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA). The data analytics company responded that it had a right to access the public pages and later sought a preliminary injunction. In granting the preliminary injunction, the district court ordered the networking site to, among other things, “remove any existing technical barriers to [its] public profiles, and to refrain from putting in place any legal or technical measures” that would block access.

The 9th Circuit previously affirmed the preliminary injunction, but was called to further consider whether the CFAA applies to the data analytics company’s data scraping after the U.S. Supreme Court vacated the appellate court’s judgment in light of its ruling in Van Buren v. United States.

On remand, the appellate court reviewed whether the data analytics company accessed data “without authorization” in violation of the CFAA after it received the cease-and-desist letter. The 9th Circuit found that the ruling in Van Buren, in which the Supreme Court suggested that the CFAA only applies in cases where someone is accused of hacking into or exceeding their authorized access to a network that is protected, or in situations where the “gates are up,” narrowed the CFAA’s scope and most likely did not apply to cases involving data scraped in bulk by automated bots from public websites. “A defining feature of public websites is that their publicly available sections lack limitations on access; instead, those sections are open to anyone with a web browser,” the appellate court wrote. “In other words, applying the ‘gates’ analogy to a computer hosting publicly available webpages, that computer has erected no gates to lift or lower in the first place.” Therefore, the court held, the phrase “without authorization” does not apply to public websites.

In determining that a preliminary injunction was appropriate, the appellate court held that the district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the data analytics company met the standard of establishing that the plaintiff is likely to succeed on the merits, is likely to suffer irreparable harm without such relief, that the “balance of equities” is in the favor of the plaintiff, and that the injunction would be in the public interest.  The court found that the data analytics company showed that it “currently has no viable way to remain in business other than using [the networking site’s] public profile data” for its analytic services and “demonstrated a likelihood of irreparable harm absent a preliminary injunction.” In considering the balance of hardships, the 9th Circuit agreed that the scales “tipped sharply” in favor of the data analytics company “when weighing the likelihood that [the data analytics company] would go out of business against [the networking site’s] assertion that an injunction threatened its members’ privacy” and therefore risked the goodwill it had developed with its members. Finally, the court rejected the networking site’s claims that the data analytics company violated the CFAA, which would have preempted the remaining state law claims.