More Prenda Insanity: Lawyer Claims Defendant Erased Infringing Activity Using A Registry Cleaner, Citing A Single EHow Submission

from the BREAKING...-Gibbs-has-filed-a-motion-for-a-'bad-court-thingy' dept

Are you ready for some more fun courtesy of Prenda Law? While there are many copyright trolls wandering the judicial system, few have proven more entertaining than Prenda Law and its partners in unintentional levity, including AF Holdings, John Steele and superlawyer Brett Gibbs.

Brett Gibbs takes center stage (again) in an ongoing copyright infringement lawsuit that has been winding its way through the courts since May of last year. Once again, Gibbs felt he had found something resembling evidence on the defendant's (Joe Navasca) hard drive, and brought in some outside “expertise” to back up his claim of “spoliation.” Specifically, Gibbs felt that a registry cleaner found on Navasca's hard drive was evidence that he had removed all traces of UTorrent and any downloaded files.

Navasca's lawyer fired a letter back challenging Gibbs' emergency motion to compel on the grounds that everything about the motion was severely ignorant.

The instant discovery dispute ultimately centers around a particular bit of software that the defendant had running on his computer – C-Cleaner. Plaintiff alleges, without any support other than an “EHow.com” user submission, that using C-Cleaner is “proof” that Defendant was destroying evidence.

Let's just pause for a moment in appreciation Gibbs' technical source, EHow. While it is generally a vast improvement over Yahoo! Answers, it's hardly the sort of place a lawyer should turn to for technical advice, especially when already over his head in a farcical legal battle, but especially when it's a single user's submission. I guess there's just no time to search for a second opinion when you're in Prenda Law. These holes won't dig themselves!

Navasca's lawyer, on the other hand, decided to quote an actual expert.

As described in the annexed declaration of a Certified Computer Examiner, C-Cleaner’s default functions (the only ones used by Defendant) do not permanently delete data, and only affect data that the average user does not even know exists.

CCleaner's own website describes what the utility does:

It removes unused files from your system – allowing Windows to run faster and freeing up valuable hard disk space. It also cleans traces of your online activities such as your Internet history. Additionally it contains a fully featured registry cleaner.

And here's how the actual Certified Computer Examiner describes CCleaner's functions under the penalty of perjury in a federal civil action, which Navasca's lawyer attached as Exhibit A.

9. CCleaner is not a “wiping program” and is not designed to “permanently remove information from a computer.” By default, CCleaner removes temporary internet files and other system files.

10. …For the most part, these are files that the average user does not even know exist and cannot even be viewed by most users. None of the files CCleaner deletes would be within the scope of discovery requests or be considered ‘reasonably accessible’ under FRCP 26.

24. The mere existence of a program such as CCleaner is not sufficient to support an allegation that a party has engaged in inappropriate conduct or deliberately attempted to destroy information. I have examined hundreds of hard drives and many of those contained the CCleaner program…it can be considered a useful program.

25. …I have worked on many other cases where different programs were used to eliminate data – programs specifically designed for this purpose such as “Evidence Eliminator”. Unlike CCleaner, Evidence Eliminator wipes the free space of the hard drive by default. And in all such cases, the programs had been uninstalled before I imaged the hard drive for examination.”

So, on the “strength” of a single EHow submission, Gibbs hoped to bypass any concerns about privilege or privacy, singling out Navasca as a copyright infringer covering his tracks with a program that a.) doesn't even perform that specific function and b.) that he had downloaded years before this suit was filed.

There's more, though. When asked for the name of someone impartial to perform the hard drive inspection, the plaintiff named Peter Hansmeier, an “individual with familial ties to Prenda Law and its predecessor in interest, Steele Hansmeier.” Not only that, but Hansmeier has “ties to instant litigation.” So much for “impartial.”

Navasca's representative also pointed out that while the defendant was willing to have his drive inspected, he could hardly grant that same permission for everyone else in his household. As is pointed out in this rather scathing letter, most (if not all) e-discovery vendors require certification that the owner, or the court itself (via a subpoena) has granted this permission.

Three days later, Judge Vadas added to Prenda's woes, delivering a terse denial of Gibbs' motion to compel. After instructing Navasca to stop running CCleaner on his computer(s), Vadas delivers this bit of advice to Gibbs.

Furthermore, allegations of spoliation are extremely serious, and the court urges Plaintiff to review the facts very carefully before pursuing this avenue based solely on an eHow.com article. In particular, Plaintiff should review the expert declaration that Navasca filed with his letter brief, to fully understand the purpose and effect of CCleaner.

As if it weren't completely apparent by now, AF Holdings, Prenda Law and their personnel are grasping at straws, somehow hoping to fumble their way into a payday while simultaneously burning their collective reputations to the ground, salting the earth and setting fire to the salt.


Filed Under: , , ,
Companies: prenda, prenda law

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “More Prenda Insanity: Lawyer Claims Defendant Erased Infringing Activity Using A Registry Cleaner, Citing A Single EHow Submission”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
44 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: By that logic...

You don’t even need open WiFi. WiFi can be easily hacked, or at least it was still the case a few years ago (so anyone with an old router is at risk). I believe the issue was that WEP keys (if I’m not mistaken) were not very secure and just very easy to crack.

Consider also that many people have short and simple passwords that a brute force attack would crack in just a few minutes. Or better yet, anyone can just try to enter ‘1234’, ‘123456’, ‘4321’ and ‘654321’ as a password since apparently more than 50% of people use one of these.

So just having a WiFi should be enough to cast doubt that nobody but you could have connected to the web through your IP address, that WiFi doesn’t need to be open.

madasahatter (profile) says:

Re: Re: By that logic...

I have often wondered about the competency or computer literacy of many these “experts”. While registry cleaning is common on Windows boxes; all computers accumulate miscellaneous trash files that do need eventual purging.

C-Cleaner’s removal and other similar software defaults to removing common garbage files that have accumulated over time. The downloaded infringing files probably have an extension *.mov and are not typically removed by these programs.

Also, Linux distros often have frequent releases and I suspect many Linux users update their distro more frequently .

Another question is whether these “experts” realize or know that Linux can use several different formats that Windows does not read because MS chose not to allow it.

Anonymous Coward says:

I would have loved to have seen the expression on Gibbs’ face when he received that bit of advice.

I wonder if he’s going to throw another “this judge hates me!” temper-tantrum now? I’m pretty sure he’d get laughed out of court (again), considering he tried to present a random eHow.com article as expert testimony or whatever.

Anonymous Coward says:

Ccleaner Wiper

Ccleaner does in fact have a wipe function. You can set it to use multiple passes, up to 35, and it will perform this function on the contents of your Trash Bin, or free space. More recently they began offering the wiping of cluster tips, a function I had seen in other drive wipers. This is the tool I use to get rid of cookies I don’t want, along with all the other Internet crapola that get left.

The registry cleaner appears to look for entries that have no corresponding file, and then removes those entries. Might be useful to hide having certain previous installations, but I find that uninstaller programs tend to leave a lot of stuff laying about. This does not remove all traces of a program.

Josh in CharlotteNC (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Both are equally worthless, and while unlikely, they could damage legitimate programs you want to be able to run.

Deleting temporary internet cached files is easily done in a safe manner via your browser. Allowing a cleaner utility to remove registry entries for other programs is not likely to be a good idea, as the creator of the cleaner is unlikely to have knowledge of how those other programs work.

Mr. Applegate says:

Re: Re: Re:

The registry cleaners work by checking the references made in the registry entries. Do the referenced items exist? Yes, OK move on. No? remove them. there is no need to know about the software that runs on the PC, we are only verifying the data in the registry is valid (all the links are present and that they too are valid).

I can’t think of one instance where using a registry cleaner has harmed a otherwise working software. I have seen it help clean up a system so malfunctioning software started working properly.

On systems that have a lot of churn in software they are an invaluable tool to help keep the registry free of errors.

Josh in CharlotteNC (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

can’t think of one instance where using a registry cleaner has harmed a otherwise working software.

You want a specific example? This one isn’t even related to ad/spyware – just questionable design of software drivers. Back when I worked at Canon, we would occasionally run across a system with a seriously screwed up print spooler that we could never get printing properly. Did some research, and eventually found out that some Lexmark printers used their own version of the print spooler, and would change various registry entries to redirect the standard Windows spooler to theirs(this is the bad software design bit). This worked fine as long as their software was installed, and would work fine if that software was properly un-installed, as the un-installer reset them back to what they should have been. However, if the software was simply deleted, it left those registry entries intact pointing to files that no longer existed. Guess what would happen when those registry cleaners found that little problem? Entire Windows printing systems were fubar’d and couldn’t be fixed without an OS reinstall. Without those cleaners, all it took was someone knowledgeable pointing the registry entries back to the standard spooler service.

While that may be a specialized example, there were plenty of other situations with programs using shared files/libraries that could experience the same type of issues.

On systems that have a lot of churn in software

If you’ve got a system like that, you should be regularly doing clean installs of the whole operating system, and dealing with the cause, not the symptoms.

Mr. Applegate says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Your example is not about a registry cleaner, but poor software design, which is one of the reasons you need a registry cleaner.

Yes Lexmark used to(not sure if they still do) screw up the print spoolers and I avoided Lexmark printer for years.

I was given a Dell printer that had Lexmark drivers and totally hosed my test system. I don’t recall all the details but in the end a registry cleaner actually deleted the incorrect registry entries, Windows was then able to repair the print spooler settings (since they were now ‘missing’) and get a working system.

Rich Fiscus (profile) says:

If he had put that web surfing time into searching Ray Beckerman’s archives he would know it only costs $200 an hour to get the RIAA’s forensic expert (Doug Jacobson) to testify that a lack of evidence is actually proof there’s a second computer. Beckerman already did all the hard work by establishing Jacobson is only “borderline incompetent.”

For another C-note he might even change his name to Alan Cooper. Just tell him it’s like witness protection from his reputation.

kenichi tanaka says:

The judge instructed Navasca to stop running CC Cleaner on his computer? Why? I use it all the time to remove files leftover from software I have previously installed on my machine. Plus, CC Cleaner is not the only hard drive or registry cleaner on the market. I can name several of them that I use.

The judge is just about as stupid as Prenda Law is. It’s like they’re using the same guidebook when it comes to “understanding the internet and computers”. lols

DannyB (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

It wouldn’t matter. But narrowing the new ‘arguments’ that Gibbs can use is important to the judge.

It also helps make the case more appeal proof. The last thing the judge needs is for Gibbs to be able to even get this case accepted by the appeals court for any missteps on the part of the judge.

The judge is just being very careful. Dotting all T’s and crossing all I’s.

Anonymous Coward says:

There was a story a while ago about licensing barriers put in place to keep folks from entering particular markets. Sounds like they need to reevaluate some Bar exams. I have to go to traffic school when I get a ticket for going 10 over the speed limit. The least they can do is make sure this chuckle-head knows which laws he’s pissing over when he files nonsensical motions.

The Real Michael says:

Hey, I use CCleaner all the time to keep my computer nice and clean. Otherwise, it gets bogged down, especially on a site like YouTube which eats away at virtual memory. I also use Free Internet Window Washer in tandem. Both do an exponential job. Also, it’s a good idea to clean your registry, wipe your HD, defrag, and error check occasionally. It’s called keeping your computer clean, healthy and error-free, i.e. what smart people do.

Is everyone who cleans their HD attempting to conceal or destroy evidence of something?

G Thompson (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Same here (for Win computers anyway) and I’m actually one of those Certified Computer Examiners (GIAC certified) and CCleaner is something I’m finding more and more lately on devices which is actually a good thing since it means people are becoming more aware of the bloatware and problems that Windows is full of.

In no way by itself does having a program like this mean you are trying to hide, destroy or change evidence. In fact the way a forensic analysis of a HDD works it won’t care if you have them or not and unless there is other proof that evidence was contained on the Drive at some previous point in time (before analysis was ordered) that is relevant to the analysis at hand then proving reliably that the lack of evidence means spoliation or destruction of evidence is completely unworkable and any CCE that places their name on such a report needs to be professionally and personally shamed.

For those that are using CCleaner, you also might like to look at ccEnhancer that adds 900+ programs to the rule list list. It also works on BleachBit (an open source equiv for CCleaner that works under *nix too)

The Real Michael says:

Re: Re: Re:

Yeah, having cleaning software is very useful. A relative of mine would never clean her PC, so it would become bogged down to the point where just clicking on My Computer would take maybe two minutes(!) to show onscreen. I’d have to go over and clean all the junk out, which would inevitably include sifting through her files looking for whatever junk was still lying around, e.g. uninstall folders, useless downloads, etc. By the time I was finished, her computer was running much more quickly. It’s also a good idea to keep anti-virus/malware/spyware programs on online-enabled computers.

Thanks for the link. I’ll go check it out.

Anonymous Coward says:

Shit if I’m going to nuke my drive I would encrypt,reformat,overwrite it, and repeat to be safe. The password would be absurdly long and unknown since you cannot give what you don’t know.
Even if they do find data it would be impossible to recover.

Honestly everyone should encrypt their drives to begin with. It’s a good practice to protect your data and having to enter a password when you boot up is not going to kill anyone. I could be wrong though and the extra few seconds could put people in the loony bin.

My computer is protected to the max for one reason, because I can. Sure it might only be some vacation photos and my personal Photoshop collection but it’s mine and I have the right to protect it even if it only has value to me.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...