9th Circuit Rules Netflix Isn't Subject To Disability Law
An anonymous reader writes with news that the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit has ruled that Netflix doesn't have to caption their videos. "A federal appeals court ruled (PDF) yesterday that the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) doesn't apply to Netflix, since the online video provider is 'not connected to any actual, physical place.' Donald Cullen sued Netflix in March 2011, attempting to kick off a class-action lawsuit on behalf of disabled people who didn't have full use of the videos because they aren't all captioned. A district court judge threw out his lawsuit in 2013, and yesterday's ruling by the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit upholds that decision. The decision is 'unpublished,' meaning it isn't intended to be used as precedent in other cases. However, it certainly doesn't bode well for any plaintiff thinking about filing a similar case in the 9th Circuit, which covers most of the Western US."
Makes me want to watch Sense and Sensibility tonight on Netflix. Wow. An ADA ruling that isn't completely asinine. What will they think of next.
Hulu has captions. Amazon Prime Video has captions. It's not like you're being completely denied the joys of interwebs TV.
Ninth Circuit unpublished cases issued after 2006 can be cited to. They are not binding precedent, so a court doesn't *have* to follow them and you don't want to cite to them if you don't have to, but they do have a small but important persuasive role where the facts are very similar to a new case.
In the country where I live and get Netflix, everything is subtitled. And I can't even disable them for most content.
I should probably sue them too for hiding 0.1% of the pixels on screen with stuff I don't care about!
Yify torrents have subtitles and don't cost a dime, piracy FTW once again.
Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
Surely the case should be against the film studios that made the films and not Netflix which is just distributing them ?
The FCC could possibly regulate this.
-73, de n1ywb
www.n1ywb.com
Just wait until the peanut parents get peanut allergies declared an official disability. Then, let them force restaurants to cater (/pun) to their defective children by banning all peanut products or creating small "peanut zones" where people will be quarantined if they want to consume peanut-containing foods.
I REALLY hate the concept of service animals...
At least this ruling has given me a tiny bit of hope for the future.
Sent from a place where there is no Netflix service.
Too true that Netflix doesn't need to offer this, with this ruling that point is even backed-up. But, can any internet based service these days really do anything that's considered a "dick-move"? The people are fickle, and "bad news" travels a heck of a lot faster these days than it did in the past.
Frankly, I think it's a heck of a risk to fight it. They're probably going to end up putting it in anyways.
It's unpublished because it wasn't considered consequential. The panel affirmed the judgment without hesitation because existing precedent was crystal clear. Per the unpublished opinion:
We have previously interpreted the statutory term “place of public accommodation” to require “some connection between the good or service complained of and an actual physical place.” See Weyer v. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp., 198 F.3d 1104, 1114 (9th Cir. 2000). Because Netflix’s services are not connected to any “actual, physical place,” Netflix is not subject to the ADA. See id. Therefore, in light of Weyer, Cullen’s ADA-predicated Disabled Persons Act and Unruh Civil Rights Act claims fail as a matter of law. See id.
In other words, the actually interesting case occurred in 2000 where it was decided that there must be a nexus among the good or service, the public accommodation, and a physical place. Your TV or computer might exist in a physical place, but it doesn't constitute a public place of accommodation. If we presume for the sake of argument that Netflix headquarters is a public place of accommodation, that's not where the relevant good or service is provided. All three things must come together for the ADA to apply.
It would suck if the plaintiff won. I love captions, and am glad that Netflix recently added them, but if Netflix lost this case then anybody with a business website would be required to make their site compatible with screen readers, etc. That's a good idea in principle, but to require by law everybody to do that would be insane.
Congress or a regulatory agency can always craft a much more narrowly tailored law which provides the same substantial benefit.
It'd be neat if companies like these could allow people to create transcripts for them / upload easily. Transcripts could be based on a trust levels (if a transcript reflected the movie well, it's rated highly).
They didn't make those video and they certainly provide a way for content creators to submit captions. Require new releases over certain budget to include captions, but don't expect one company to be responsible for entire entertainment industry.
The ADA is horribly abused and has been a gold mine for slimy trial lawyers for years.
So many of their rules are stupid. Take ramps for example, the rules are TWELVE FEET of distance for every FOOT of rise. That's 1/12... By this logic, half the streets in san francisco are in violation of the ADA... that is the fucking hills have grades that are steeper than that. It is stupid.
The ADA should generally be repealed. Most businesses want customers disabled or otherwise to feel comfortable there and use their services. That alone should be enough to see that most things are accessible. Yes, seriously disabled people are going to need help. Let us not pretend that if we cover the world with ramps that such people can live on their own without assistance. Who bathes them etc? And here you might sight some fellow that winches himself into the tub with pullies. Any such fellow isn't going to need a 1/12 ramp to get into a shop.
Being disabled sucks. But being disabled is not a license to force everyone in the rest of society to cover the world in bubblewrap.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
That would be like suing a book store for not having audiobooks and braille for all of their titles. Sometimes that little prick in a wheel chair causing trouble at the end of the day is just a little prick.
Wow. So when Netflix violates the expectations of an established law to protect access for disabled people it's cool, we're going to let it slide because they aren't really a "place." (And broadcast TV stations were??) But of course if some college kid comes up with a clever way to share copies of a movie in such a way that it technically happens in tiny, individually legal steps, possibly all on foreign soil, well, somebody has to get jail time.
Not enough that money is power. Gotta rub people's faces in it.
They are being sued because a lawyer saw a chance to extort money from Netflix. AFAIK this lawyer didn't even have any plaintiffs.
For those that aren't aware we have a HUGE surplus of lawyers in this country. I'd wager better than half the law school graduates these days can't find jobs. What that means in practical terms is that we have a whole lot of lawyers trying to survive by launching lawsuits in "creative" manners. In plain English there are a bunch of sleazy lawyers trying to extort money from anyone they can using their law degrees. You see this in suits like this and the blatant extortion going on in the copyright trolling regime. It doesn't help that the legal profession seems to draw sociopaths to the career.
Expect to see these type of lawsuits all the time for the next decade at least.
I was once part of an audio book venture that created a book reader app and and associated library application library that was specifically designed to be used by the blind and severely disabled. It actually met all its goals in regards to usability. So the company took it to the largest national organizations to get their seal of approval for it. The company was turned down by all of them because although application interface years ahead of any other application in regrades to the blind and severely disabled, their words, it did not accommodate the deaf. An audio book application that did not accommodate the deaf.
Undetectable Steganography? Yep, there's an app fo
Because it garnered votes from the elderly.
Because the elderly vote, while young people blather on about how the system is stupid, or they don't like who is running, or whatever other excuse is used that day to not vote.
That would be like suing a book store for not having audiobooks and braille for all of their titles. Sometimes that little prick in a wheel chair causing trouble at the end of the day is just a little prick.
I see a potential argument that DRM prevents assistive technologies that can do transcription for you...
It true that many books aren't available as audiobooks or braille, but they are not intentionally covered with a plastic film designed to make it impossible to scan them into a program that can read out loud...
In fact many people with dyslexia relies on a scanning books and text-to-speech technology for their studies.
Anyways, yes, requiring all titles to have subtitles might be crazy... But NetFlix is actively preventing disabled people from using their content with DRM. I'm not sure that's okay, it's certainly different from not having audiobooks for all titles.
If the headline summary is accurate, this is the dumbest court decision evah!!!
They have an address of record, where legal service can take place. Also, the ADA is in effect everywhere in the USA. Where Netflix exists.
Dumb. D. U. M B.!!!
Think of the Irony!
I understand not being an asshole to disabled people. Not making their life intentionally more difficult than it is.
I understand helping others if possible. Adding captions when you're doing subtitles in other languages anyways, putting ramps next to stairs when you're rebuilding the entrance anyway, that kind of thing.
I understand you might want to add these things by themselves for a bigger market or because of customer loyalty, or just because you can and it's not a big expense.
What I don't understand is this extremist approach of having the entire world change for your specific need. Old buildings that need to be damaged and reworked to cater to wheelchair people. A lawsuit not because you refuse to do captions, but because you don't have 100% coverage of them. This kind of crap gives people less desire to be friendly to disabled people, and very soon they'll do it only because the law requires it and only to the extent that the law requires.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
I fucking love that almost all (in excess of 90% in my experience) Netflix things have captions. My hearing is fine, but I use captions all the damn time, whenever available. Whenever I go to movies (rarely) I'm always subconsciously looking for captions for the first five minutes and being disappointed by occasionally muddy indecipherable dialogue thereafter.
have they even thought of that "caption option" might become a burden for other Netflix users?
Why would it be? It's not like you can't turn it off.
Comparing captions to wheelchair ramps is a stretch.
So yet another way in which "pirates" have a much better viewing experience than people actually paying for the content. Remember folks, these companies are run by greedy people who will not make something accessible to deaf people because it costs too much of their precious profits.
Fuck their precious feelings
Hulu has captions. Amazon Prime Video has captions. It's not like you're being completely denied the joys of interwebs TV.
My experience is that Netflix has a lot more videos with captions than Amazon Prime. Last year I had a girlfriend who spoke English as a second language. Her English was pretty good, but not fluent. She wanted to improve, so sometimes we would stream movies and I would turn on the captions or subtitles (whichever is the right term) if available as she said it helped her. There were several times when both Amazon and Netflix had a movie and only Netflix has the captions. It got so common that basically we only used Amazon in cases where Netflix simply didn't have it available for streaming. I'm sure there are some movies or shows where Amazon has captions and Netflix didn't, but I think that those are exceptions.
Cost. When the captions are mandated, all those who don't use them pay for them as well.
It costs money to have captions put on things, it isn't free.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
nice. Like Obamacare for Netflix users, only the infirm benefit and everyone else loses?
Most new shows (shows made since the ADA) made in the US will come with captions, since those were made mandatory for broadcast (I assume, otherwise it is voluntary compliance, which I doubt). These shows all seem to have captions on Netflix. The problem is that the back-catalog, would either need to have captions added or be removed entirely.
This is where the 'caption option' becomes a burden for others, Netflix can perhaps start working on the back-catalog, but if they can't show anything without captions, that takes away choice from everyone else.
This verdict seems due to the wording of the law, and Netflix not being associated with a physical location. And captioning all the content could be burdensome. But why make the disabled pay for content they cannot hear or understand ? Why not just give them a discount ?
The legal cost of all this could have been avoided and the desired outcome achieved if they had worked with netflix to get CC support on the portion of the library still missing it. Transcribing audio to CC takes worker's time and therefore money, money that went into things like paying lawyers to bicker over weather or not netflix should be forced to do it. I would love to see a program set up by netflix to offer a free month of netflix in exchange for transcribing a show or proofing a transcription. Quality of their delivered product would go up at a minimal actual cost to them. Where Hulu and amazon prime already have CC, this would also help them be more competitive.
This is kind of sad, I am an avid user of Netflix, Amazon Prime, and other sources. If something isn't captioned, usually in a few months it is. I would like it that they captioned stuff because they have a business case for it (stuff with captions are watched more than stuff that isn't). If Netflix wasn't worth it to me because too many things were uncaptioned, I would drop the service. I spend quite a bit of money on Amazon, so they should have a business case to put captioning on their Prime offerings, even as a loss leader, to hook me into feeling good about Amazon and buying stuff from them. I would like them to make the world better for me out of positive reinforcement, not because they'll get sued otherwise.
Something tells me that they've got all that modeled and figured out. Very much when you browse fishing rods on a whim, and the next month you see nothing but fishing rod advertisements in every web site you visit. Creepy!
This is true of pretty much any case where disabled have to be accommodated. We as a society have decided that free market won't work here (because they're too few, and so it generally doesn't make sense to cater to them), and that burdening the disabled themselves with those costs is unfair, and it's better to spread them around.
According to the film studios, adding subtitles creates a derivative work and the distribution of it a copyright violation
Providing service at all is a copyright violation outside of a negotiated license. Providing captions is not an infringement if captioning is in the license agreement. Had the court found Netflix subject to disability accommodation law, Netflix might have had more leverage to amend captioning into the agreements with the studios.
There exist explicit exceptions under U.S. copyright law for braille books and for audio books in special formats for use by blind people. (See Pratt-Smoot Act as amended.) There do not yet exist such exceptions for captions in devices used by deaf people. Netflix would have to negotiate captioning with the movie studios.
I disagree with you. Captions provide more accurate transcript than audio. Since you are rejected to accommodate to all Deaf/Hard of Hearing's chance to watch movie with captions. So that means there is no equal access to everyone. Smh