In a recent opinion, the Ninth Circuit clarified the defense of copyright misuse, finding the defense inapplicable in a dispute between Apple Inc. and Psystar Corp. Apple, one of the most prolific software producers in the world, sued Psystar for copyright infringement based on Psystar’s practice of copying Apple’s Mac OS X operating software for use in Psystar computers. Essentially, Psystar would make a master copy of the Mac OS X software, and install a copy on one of their computers. Psystar would then bundle the computer for sale with an unopened packaged version of MAC OSX that it would purchase from any number of retailers. Psystar would purchase these copies so it could assert that it had purchased the software to run on each computer it sold, when actually the computers would run on the pre-installed copied version of Mac OS X.
Prior to the Ninth Circuit appeal, the Northern District held that Psystar was infringing on Apple’s copyrights in Mac OS X. Psystar argued that the defense of copyright misuse made Apple’s Software License Agreement unenforceable.
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