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For present purposes, the Court concludes that the public interest favors hiQ's position As explained above, the actual privacy interests of LinkedIn users in their public data are at best uncertain. It is likely that those who opt for the public view setting expect their public profile will be subject to searches, date mining, aggregation, and analysis. On the other hand, conferring on private entities such as LinkedIn, the blanket authority to block viewers from accessing information publicly available on its website for any reason, backed by sanctions of the CFAA, could pose an ominous threat to public discourse and the free flow of information promised by the Internet.

 

IV. CONCLUSION

In sum, the Court concludes that: (1) the balance of hardships tips sharply in hiQ‟s favor; (2) hiQ has raised serious questions going to the merits of its UCL claim and the applicability of the CFAA; and (3) t he public interest favors a preliminary injunction. For these reasons, the Court GRANTS hiQ's motion for a preliminary injunction and ORDERS as follows:

 
  1. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys are hereby enjoined from (1) preventing hiQ's access, copying, or use of public profiles on LinkedIn's website ( i.e., information which LinkedIn members have designated public, meaning it is visible not just to LinkedIn members but also to others, including those who may access LinkedIn's website via Google, Bing, other services, or by direct URL) and (2) blocking or putting in place any mechanism (whether legal or technical) with the effect of blocking hiQ's access to such member public profiles To the extent LinkedIn has already put in place technology to prevent hiQ from accessing these public profiles, it is ordered to remove any such barriers within 24 hours of the issuance of this Order.
  2. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys shall withdraw the cease and desist letters to hiQ dated May 23, 2017 and June 24, 2017. LinkedIn shall refrain from issuing any further cease and desist letters on the grounds therein stated during the pendency of this injunction.
  3. This preliminary injunction shall take effect immediately.
  4. No bond shall be required, as Defendant has not demonstrated it is likely to be harmed by being so enjoined. This order disposes of Docket No. 23.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

For present purposes, the Court concludes that the public interest favors hiQ's position As explained above, the actual privacy interests of LinkedIn users in their public data are at best uncertain. It is likely that those who opt for the public view setting expect their public profile will be subject to searches, date mining, aggregation, and analysis. On the other hand, conferring on private entities such as LinkedIn, the blanket authority to block viewers from accessing information publicly available on its website for any reason, backed by sanctions of the CFAA, could pose an ominous threat to public discourse and the free flow of information promised by the Internet.

 

IV. CONCLUSION

In sum, the Court concludes that: (1) the balance of hardships tips sharply in hiQ‟s favor; (2) hiQ has raised serious questions going to the merits of its UCL claim and the applicability of the CFAA; and (3) t he public interest favors a preliminary injunction. For these reasons, the Court GRANTS hiQ's motion for a preliminary injunction and ORDERS as follows:

 
  1. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys are hereby enjoined from (1) preventing hiQ's access, copying, or use of public profiles on LinkedIn's website ( i.e., information which LinkedIn members have designated public, meaning it is visible not just to LinkedIn members but also to others, including those who may access LinkedIn's website via Google, Bing, other services, or by direct URL) and (2) blocking or putting in place any mechanism (whether legal or technical) with the effect of blocking hiQ's access to such member public profiles To the extent LinkedIn has already put in place technology to prevent hiQ from accessing these public profiles, it is ordered to remove any such barriers within 24 hours of the issuance of this Order.
  2. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys shall withdraw the cease and desist letters to hiQ dated May 23, 2017 and June 24, 2017. LinkedIn shall refrain from issuing any further cease and desist letters on the grounds therein stated during the pendency of this injunction.
  3. This preliminary injunction shall take effect immediately.
  4. No bond shall be required, as Defendant has not demonstrated it is likely to be harmed by being so enjoined. This order disposes of Docket No. 23.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

For present purposes, the Court concludes that the public interest favors hiQ's position As explained above, the actual privacy interests of LinkedIn users in their public data are at best uncertain. It is likely that those who opt for the public view setting expect their public profile will be subject to searches, date mining, aggregation, and analysis. On the other hand, conferring on private entities such as LinkedIn, the blanket authority to block viewers from accessing information publicly available on its website for any reason, backed by sanctions of the CFAA, could pose an ominous threat to public discourse and the free flow of information promised by the Internet.

IV. CONCLUSION

In sum, the Court concludes that: (1) the balance of hardships tips sharply in hiQ‟s favor; (2) hiQ has raised serious questions going to the merits of its UCL claim and the applicability of the CFAA; and (3) t he public interest favors a preliminary injunction. For these reasons, the Court GRANTS hiQ's motion for a preliminary injunction and ORDERS as follows:

  1. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys are hereby enjoined from (1) preventing hiQ's access, copying, or use of public profiles on LinkedIn's website ( i.e., information which LinkedIn members have designated public, meaning it is visible not just to LinkedIn members but also to others, including those who may access LinkedIn's website via Google, Bing, other services, or by direct URL) and (2) blocking or putting in place any mechanism (whether legal or technical) with the effect of blocking hiQ's access to such member public profiles To the extent LinkedIn has already put in place technology to prevent hiQ from accessing these public profiles, it is ordered to remove any such barriers within 24 hours of the issuance of this Order.
  2. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys shall withdraw the cease and desist letters to hiQ dated May 23, 2017 and June 24, 2017. LinkedIn shall refrain from issuing any further cease and desist letters on the grounds therein stated during the pendency of this injunction.
  3. This preliminary injunction shall take effect immediately.
  4. No bond shall be required, as Defendant has not demonstrated it is likely to be harmed by being so enjoined. This order disposes of Docket No. 23.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

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TylerH
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I am not a lawyer (nor do I speak for Stack Overflow; I'm just a user).

Here's the court's final paragraph on the public interest followed by the conclusion (the ruling) for the case you are referring to - HiQ Labs v LinkedIn Corporation:

For present purposes, the Court concludes that the public interest favors hiQ's position As explained above, the actual privacy interests of LinkedIn users in their public data are at best uncertain. It is likely that those who opt for the public view setting expect their public profile will be subject to searches, date mining, aggregation, and analysis. On the other hand, conferring on private entities such as LinkedIn, the blanket authority to block viewers from accessing information publicly available on its website for any reason, backed by sanctions of the CFAA, could pose an ominous threat to public discourse and the free flow of information promised by the Internet.

IV. CONCLUSION

In sum, the Court concludes that: (1) the balance of hardships tips sharply in hiQ‟s favor; (2) hiQ has raised serious questions going to the merits of its UCL claim and the applicability of the CFAA; and (3) t he public interest favors a preliminary injunction. For these reasons, the Court GRANTS hiQ's motion for a preliminary injunction and ORDERS as follows:

  1. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys are hereby enjoined from (1) preventing hiQ's access, copying, or use of public profiles on LinkedIn's website ( i.e., information which LinkedIn members have designated public, meaning it is visible not just to LinkedIn members but also to others, including those who may access LinkedIn's website via Google, Bing, other services, or by direct URL) and (2) blocking or putting in place any mechanism (whether legal or technical) with the effect of blocking hiQ's access to such member public profiles To the extent LinkedIn has already put in place technology to prevent hiQ from accessing these public profiles, it is ordered to remove any such barriers within 24 hours of the issuance of this Order.
  2. Defendant LinkedIn Corporation and its officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys shall withdraw the cease and desist letters to hiQ dated May 23, 2017 and June 24, 2017. LinkedIn shall refrain from issuing any further cease and desist letters on the grounds therein stated during the pendency of this injunction.
  3. This preliminary injunction shall take effect immediately.
  4. No bond shall be required, as Defendant has not demonstrated it is likely to be harmed by being so enjoined. This order disposes of Docket No. 23.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

LinkedIn tried to pin the majority of its defense on the CFAA, which outlaws unauthorized access - or misuse of authorized access - to a computer system, and the court smacked that down (rightfully) as far too broad an interpretation of the CFAA. If it had granted LinkedIn's CFAA argument, then half of the people on the internet would suddenly be guilty of a federal crime.

Key to LinkedIn's loss in this case were that

  1. They blocked HiQ on all levels from accessing their site and data after HiQ started scraping and
  2. LinkedIn's argument for privacy was undermined in several points by the fact that LinkedIn has previously sold its user data to a 3rd party without disclosing that to users, and LinkedIn could not show substantial user complaints about privacy, let alone user complaints about privacy related to HiQ's scraping.

Furthering HiQ's claim is that LinkedIn is literally a website where members go to display their personal data publicly and privately; that's the point, the function of the website. LinkedIn blocking a competitor's access to that was anti-competitive and therefore likely violating the Sherman Act and a host of other anti-trust laws. I doubt the same argument could be made by a scraper trying to sue Stack Overflow; we don't come to Stack Overflow to sell ourselves, we come to Stack Overflow to ask and answer questions. The fact that we have many users who have totally anonymous and blank user profiles lends itself heavily to that.

There were other small claims on both sides that the court also struck down (HiQ even tried to argue promissory estoppel WRT to public user profile data - arguing that, essentially, users were suffering from LinkedIn blocking HiQ, because LinkedIn "made a promise to users that they controlled their profile privacy settings").

With regard to the Developer Story... that's kind of exactly like LinkedIn's profiles, so this ruling may well affect Stack Overflow's ability to restrict scraping of those. But that depends on it being brought to court, and this ruling being used in a plaintiff's argument. It's likely that Stack Overflow will continue it's prohibitive policy until such time as it is challenged in court and found to be in violation of existing laws.