hiQ Wins Motion for Preliminary Injunction in Landmark Lawsuit against LinkedIn
Note to Editors: On August 14, 2017, Judge Edward Chen of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California granted hiQ Labs' request for a Preliminary Injunction (PI) against LinkedIn Corporation to prevent LinkedIn from using legal or technological measures to restrict hiQ's access to publicly available LinkedIn profile information that hiQ uses to provide analysis and insight to its clients.
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 15, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- hiQ issued the following statement in response to the decision:
This is an important victory – not just for hiQ, but for any company that uses publicly available data for the services it provides. hiQ believes that public data must remain public, and innovation on the Internet should not be stifled by legal bullying or the anti-competitive hoarding of public data by a small group of powerful companies.
In granting our request for a preliminary injunction against LinkedIn, Judge Chen rejected LinkedIn's attempt to cast hiQ's aggregation and analysis of publicly available information from the LinkedIn website as a violation of a federal criminal statute. Specifically, the judge ruled "the Court is doubtful that the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act may be invoked by LinkedIn to punish hiQ for accessing publicly available data; the broad interpretation of the CFAA advocated by LinkedIn, if adopted, could profoundly impact open access to the Internet, a result that Congress could not have intended when it enacted the CFAA over three decades ago." The Court further explained that if "merely viewing a website in contravention of a unilateral directive from a private entity would be a crime," the law would "effect[] the digital equivalence of Medusa." The court also ruled that "hiQ has raised serious questions as to whether LinkedIn, in blocking hiQ's access to public data, possibly as a means to limiting competition, violates state law."
This ruling allows us to continue serving our clients while we seek to permanently prevent LinkedIn from monopolizing the aggregation and analysis of publicly available information on the web. This is a step in the right direction to ensure that any person or company looking to build a business on data analytics of public data may do so. This includes any company who may have received a cease-and-desist letter from LinkedIn or other companies trying to exert exclusive control over information designated public by their users.
It is important to understand that hiQ doesn't analyze private sections of LinkedIn – we only review public profile information. We don't republish or sell the data we collect. We only use it as the basis for the valuable analysis we provide to employers. Moreover, LinkedIn doesn't own the data contained in member profiles. It is information the members themselves have decided to display publicly, and it is available to anyone with access to a web browser.
And despite LinkedIn's protests that they are only trying to protect the privacy of their members, the Court noted with respect to LinkedIn's Recruiter product, LinkedIn "trumpets its own product in a way that seems to afford little deference to the very privacy concerns it professes to be protecting in this case." At the hearing, hiQ pointed out that LinkedIn marketing materials indicate that it may be selling services to third parties based on LinkedIn profile information in its entirety (regardless of whether Members have designated the information private). The San Francisco Chronicle recently characterized LinkedIn as being "guilty of blatant hypocrisy," and Judge Chen referenced LinkedIn's practices in his ruling.
We look forward to presenting our full case to the court, to LinkedIn and to the public, as we seek a Permanent Injunction to prevent LinkedIn from "walling off" sections of the public Internet simply to eliminate market competitors.
About hiQ Labs, Inc.
hiQ Labs, Inc., based in San Francisco, is a tech startup that collects and analyzes public profile information on LinkedIn to provide its clients—mostly large companies—with insights about their employees. The company offers two main products:
- Keeper, which analyzes which employees are at risk of leaving the company, and
- Skill Mapper, shows the range of skills possessed by employees.
For more information, visit: www.hiqlabs.com
Andrea M. Garcia
PRCG | Haggerty
(212) 683-1800
[email protected]
SOURCE hiQ Labs
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