DOE v. Github (original complaint) Court Filing, retrieved on November 3, 2022 is part of HackerNoon’s Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filing here. This is part 11 of 37.
D. Commonality & Predominance
37. Numerous questions of law or fact common to the entire Class arise from Defendants’ conduct—including, but not limited to those identified below:
1. DMCA Violations
2. Contract-Related Conduct
Whether Defendants violated the Licenses governing use of the Licensed Materials by using them to train Copilot and for republishing those materials without appending the required Attribution, Copyright Notice, or License Terms.
Whether Defendants interfered in contractual relations between the Class and the public regarding the Licensed Materials by concealing the License Terms.
Whether GitHub committed Fraud when it promised not to sell or distribute Licensed Materials outside GitHub in the GitHub Terms of Service and Privacy Statement.
3. Unlawful-Competition Conduct
4. Privacy Violations
Whether GitHub violated the Class’s rights under the California Consumer Privacy Act (“CCPA”), the GitHub Privacy Statement, and/or the California Constitution by, inter alia, sharing the Class’s sensitive personal information (or, in the alternative, by not addressing an ongoing data breach of which it is aware); creating a product that contains personal data GitHub cannot delete, alter, nor share with the applicable Class member; and selling the Class’s personal data.
Whether GitHub committed Negligence when it failed to stop a still-ongoing data breach it was and continues to be aware of.
5. Injunctive Relief
Whether this Court should enjoin Defendants from engaging in the unlawful conduct alleged herein. And what the scope of that injunction would be.
6. Defenses
38. These and other questions of law and fact are common to the Class and predominate over any questions affecting the Class members individually.
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This court case 3:22-cv-06823-KAW retrieved on September 5, 2023, from Storage.Courtlistener is part of the public domain. The court-created documents are works of the federal government, and under copyright law, are automatically placed in the public domain and may be shared without legal restriction.