Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court Agrees To Hear Case On Search Injunction Against Google

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2016 10:55 AM
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will hear Google's appeal of a British Columbia injunction ordering the Internet titan to stop linking to a company that's being sued for trademark infringement.
     
    In 2014, the B.C. Supreme Court ordered Google to stop indexing or referencing websites run by Morgan Jack through his web-based business, Datalink Technologies Gateways.
     
    Google appealed the injunction, claiming the B.C. court lacked jurisdiction to impose a worldwide ban and raising free speech issues.
     
    The provincial court of appeal found the lower court did have jurisdiction and that the injunction was proper.
     
    Google appealed again and now the Supreme Court says it will hear the case.
     
    As usual, the justices gave no reason for choosing to hear the appeal.
     
    In the 2015 ruling under appeal, Justice Harvey Groberman of the provincial court of appeal said Google effectively does business in British Columbia, meaning there was jurisdiction to impose the injunction.
     
    The case involves B.C.-based Equustek Solutions Inc., which produces industrial network interface hardware.
     
    It alleges that Datalink, once an Equustek distributor, relabelled the technology and passed it off as its own. It also alleges Datalink unlawfully acquired confidential information from Equustek to design and make its own competing product and sell it on several websites.
     
     
    Equustek sought to cut off Datalink's sales with an injunction that would stop Google from linking to the questioned sites.
     
    Google initially agreed to shut down some sites, but objected to a broader ban.
     
    "In 2012, the plaintiffs sought an injunction against Google to force it to remove a number of websites used by the defendants from its search indexes," Groberman wrote in his ruling.
     
    "Google voluntarily removed some 345 URLs from search results on google.ca, but it was not willing to go further. In early 2013, the plaintiffs indicated that they were not satisfied with the arrangement, and the matter returned to court."
     
    The justice said the google.ca solution was of limited value because the defendants kept shifting sites and most of the questioned sales were to purchasers outside Canada.
     
    "The plaintiffs described the effect as being like a game of 'Whack-A-Mole', in which the defendants were nimble enough to circumvent Google's voluntary arrangement."
     
    The case also raised concerns about free speech on and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association and Electronic Frontier Foundation both intervened to argue the need for openness on the World Wide Web.
     
    Groberman, however, said that free speech was not an issue here.
     
     
    "Google does not suggest that the orders made against the defendants were inappropriate, nor do the interveners suggest that those orders constituted an inappropriate intrusion on freedom of speech."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Onslaught' Of Online Threats Follows Oregon College Shooting: Expert

    The University of Toronto, McMaster University in Hamilton and Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ont., have also been targeted.

    'Onslaught' Of Online Threats Follows Oregon College Shooting: Expert

    Homicide Detectives Investigating After Soldier, Woman Fall To Their Deaths From Toronto Highrise

    Homicide Detectives Investigating After Soldier, Woman Fall To Their Deaths From Toronto Highrise
    Poilce say the bodies of Robert Giblin, 43, and Precious Charbonneau, 33, were found Sunday night after apparently falling from a highrise in central Toronto.

    Homicide Detectives Investigating After Soldier, Woman Fall To Their Deaths From Toronto Highrise

    Alberta's Finance Minister Says Low Oil May Delay Programs, Initiatives

    Alberta's Finance Minister Says Low Oil May Delay Programs, Initiatives
    Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci says millions of dollars in initiatives promised by the NDP government may be delayed due to low oil prices.

    Alberta's Finance Minister Says Low Oil May Delay Programs, Initiatives

    At Least 2 Canadians In Hospital After Driver Hits Pedestrians In Las Vegas

    At Least 2 Canadians In Hospital After Driver Hits Pedestrians In Las Vegas
    A hospital spokeswoman says two Canadians are among five people in either critical or serious condition after a woman intentionally drove her car into pedestrians on a sidewalk outside a Las Vegas casino.

    At Least 2 Canadians In Hospital After Driver Hits Pedestrians In Las Vegas

    Ontario Mom Disappointed At Reactions To Her Breastfeeding On Santa's Lap

    Ontario Mom Disappointed At Reactions To Her Breastfeeding On Santa's Lap
    Rebecca Dunbar says she had the picture taken mostly as a joke, but decided to post it in a bid to increase acceptance of the practice of nursing in public.

    Ontario Mom Disappointed At Reactions To Her Breastfeeding On Santa's Lap

    Dashing To The Store, Poll Suggests Most Canadians Haven't Done Holiday Shopping

    Dashing To The Store, Poll Suggests Most Canadians Haven't Done Holiday Shopping
    A poll suggests most Canadians will be spending some time over the next few days elbowing their way through crowded stores to buy that last holiday gift

    Dashing To The Store, Poll Suggests Most Canadians Haven't Done Holiday Shopping