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Haines V Cengage Learning Inc

              IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                        
              FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO                          
                WESTERN DIVISION – CINCINNATI                            

ALEXANDRIA HAINES, individually  :  Case No. 1:24-cv-710                 
and on behalf of those similarly situated,  :                            
                                :   Judge Matthew W. McFarland           
                             Plaintiff,  :                               
                                :                                        
          v.                    :                                        
                                :                                        
CENGAGE LEARNING, INC.,         :                                        
                                :                                        
               Defendant.       :                                        
______________________________________________________________________________ 

     ORDER ADOPTING REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION (Doc. 18)                  
______________________________________________________________________________ 

    This matter is before the Court upon the Report and Recommendation (“Report”) 
of United States Magistrate Judge Karen L. Litkovitz (Doc. 18), to whom this case is 
referred pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b). In the Report, the Magistrate Judge recommends 
that this Court deny Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 10). Defendant filed Objections 
to the Report (Doc. 19), to which Plaintiff responded (Doc. 20). Thus, the matter is ripe 
for the Court’s review.                                                   
    Defendant objects to the Report for several reasons. As an initial matter, the Court 
notes that many of Defendant’s Objections largely restate the same arguments made in 
its  briefing  on  its  Motion  to  Dismiss  (Doc.  10).  “An  exact  recitation  of  arguments 
previously raised” will fail to “meet the specificity requirement for objections.”, as 
rehashing the same arguments made previously defeats the purpose and efficiency of the 
Federal Magistrate’s Act under 28 U.S.C. § 636. Stewart v. Sheldon, No. 1:19-CV-2283, 2022 
WL 1289229, at *4 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 29, 2022) (“Because Petitioner’s objection is a mere 
restatement of arguments previously before the Court and thoughtfully analyzed by the 

assigned magistrate judge, it is not a proper objection and the Court need not conduct de 
novo review.”); Aldrich v. Bock, 327 F. Supp. 2d 743, 747 (E.D. Mich. 2004) (“An ‘objection’ 
that does nothing more than state a disagreement with a magistrate [judge’s] suggested 
resolution, or simply summarizes what has been presented before, is not an ‘objection’ as 
that  term  is  used  in this  context.”). For  many  of  its  Objections,  Defendant  fails  to 
demonstrate any factual or legal error in the Magistrate Judge’s thorough and well-

reasoned Report. The Court will detail these Objections below.            
    In the first Objection, Defendant argues that the Report erred in finding that 
Plaintiff has Article III standing. (Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 174.) Rather than attack one 
specific finding though, Defendant repeats the same arguments made in its Motion, 
Reply, and oral argument, then couches those arguments with the claim that the Report 

made an incorrect finding in Plaintiff’s favor on those arguments. (See Motion, Doc. 10, 
Pg. ID 63-66; Reply, Doc. 14, Pg. ID 106-09; Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 174.) Defendant 
seemingly admits this when it states that the Report “misapprehends” its position: “As 
stated in its initial briefing and at oral argument, [Defendant]’s position is that the 
Report’s  recommendation  fails  to  acknowledge  the  key  deficiencies  in  Plaintiff’s 

allegations.” (Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 174.) Defendant thus concedes that it made the 
same arguments in briefing and oral argument that it does in opposition to the Report. 
Such restatements amount to a failure to object. See Bradley v. United States, No. 18-1444, 
2018 WL 5084806, at *3 (6th Cir. Sept. 17, 2018); Stewart, 2022 WL 1289229, at *4; Aldrich, 
327 F. Supp. 2d at 747. Furthermore, the Objections have the same issue as the Motion 
with regard to the question of standing: “they go directly to the merits of [P]laintiff’s 

VPPA claim.” (Report, Doc. 18, Pg. ID 156.) Defendant contends that Plaintiff did not 
plead with specificity the video titles in her Complaint. (Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 175.) 
Not only is the Objection a restatement of prior arguments, but it fails to address 
Plaintiff’s standing and attacks the claim’s merits instead. So, even considering the 
Objection, the Court does not find it well-taken.                         
    Defendant  next  argues  that  the  Report  erred  in  recommending  that  Plaintiff 

adequately pled her Video Privacy Protection Act (“VPPA”) claims for several reasons. 
(Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 175.) Defendant reiterates the same reasoning on the VPPA 
statutory  language  that  it  had  stated  in  its  briefing,  and  that  the  Report  already 
considered. (See Motion, Doc. 10, Pg. ID 67-71; Report, Doc. 18, Pg. ID 159-68; see also 
Response  to  Objections,  Doc.  20,  Pg.  ID  193-94  (“Defendant  attempts  to  rehash  its 

statutory construction argument . . . . Defendant is merely repeating its call for this Court 
adopt the non-binding ‘ordinary person’ standard . . . for PII.”).) For instance, both in its 
Motion and Objections, Defendant asserts that the Court should adopt out-of-circuit 
interpretations of the VPPA to avoid an interpretation that “would render the definition 
[of specific video materials] limitless.” (Motion, Doc. 10, Pg. ID 69; Objections, Doc. 19, 

Pg.  ID  177.)  Indeed,  Defendant  used  the  same  argument  in  both  its  Motion  and 
Objections; the only difference in the Objections was Defendant’s comment that the 
Report erred in its finding against the argument.                         
    Nevertheless, Defendant contends that the Magistrate Judge erred in reaching her 
conclusion, stating that the Report “goes one step further” in accepting as true Plaintiff’s 

“conclusory  allegation  that  she  purchased  prerecorded  video  material  satisfies  her 
burden  of  alleging  the  specific  video  materials  supposedly  disclosed  by  Cengage. 
(Objections, Doc. 19.) Although this sounds like a specific objection, it mirrors the exact 
argument Defendant made in its Motion: “Despite her assertion otherwise, a subscription 
to broadly access an online educational course, without more, is not tantamount to a 
disclosure of a specific individual’s video-watching behavior.” (Motion, Doc. 10, Pg. ID 

69 (cleaned up).) Besides stating that the Report made the wrong finding on this point, 
the Objection does not point to any specific finding as erroneous beyond re-arguing the 
same statements it made throughout briefing and oral argument. And, as Defendant 
objects to the Report’s finding that the URL does not indicate that the Plaintiff requested 
video materials, as required by the VPPA, the Court notes that Defendant made these 

precise arguments in its Motion. (Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 179-82; Motion, Doc. 8, Pg. 
ID 69-71.) These Objections, too, are not well-taken. Bradley, 2018 WL 5084806, at *3; 
Stewart, 2022 WL 1289229, at *4; Aldrich, 327 F. Supp. 2d at 747.         
    Defendant  also  objects  to  the  Report’s  reliance  on  cases  that  do  not  require 
“granular specificity at the pleading stage” for VPPA claims. (Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 

182.) This Objection is indeed specific to the Report’s finding, and thus warrants review 
by the Court. The Report states that courts reviewing similar complaints to Plaintiff’s 
“have not demanded” that a plaintiff needs to allege the specific video content requested 
or obtained from a defendant in order to plead a VPPA claim. (Report, Doc. 18, Pg. ID 
162 (collecting cases).) Defendant objects to this finding, arguing that the cases mentioned 
involved plaintiffs “who have alleged far more than Plaintiff here—including that the 

defendant disclosed the specific name of the video materials watched or obtained by the 
plaintiff.” (Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 182.)                            
    But, the Court disagrees that Plaintiff must include the specific name of the video 
materials. And, the Sixth Circuit has not required such specificity. Salazar v. Paramount 
Global, 133 F.4th 642, 651-52 (6th Cir. 2025). Plaintiff alleged the name of the course that 
included the specific video materials at issue, and that Defendant disclosed her private 

viewing information to Meta. (Compl., Doc. 1, ¶¶ 12-13.) By comparison, in Salazar, the 
plaintiff merely alleged that he watched video material from 247sports.com with his 
subscription, and did not allege the specific video titles he viewed. See Complaint, ¶¶ 46-
49, 683 F. Supp.3d 727 (M.D. Tenn. 2023) (3:22-cv-756), aff’d, 133 F.4th 642 (6th Cir. 2025). 
Although the court ultimately dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint, its reasoning had 

nothing to do with the plaintiff’s failure to include the titles of the videos he viewed. 
Salazar, 133 F4th at 653; see also 683 F. Supp.3d 727 (M.D. Tenn. 2023). Like the complaint 
in Salazar, Plaintiff here has pled a VPPA cause of action with the requisite specificity to 
state a claim for relief; the Court agrees with the Report that “granular specificity” need 
not be included in her Complaint.                                         

    Finally, Defendant’s Objection to the Report’s finding that Plaintiff sufficiently 
alleged  the  identification  of  a  specific  person’s  video  watching  habits  is  similarly 
repetitive.  (See  Objections,  Doc.  19,  Pg.  ID  183.)  Defendant  critiques  the  Report’s 
declination to adopt either approach presented by the circuit split on the issue. (Id.) The 
Objection states that this error is “twofold.” (Id.) First, Defendant argues that this Court 
should adopt the ordinary person test, as out-of-circuit courts have. (Id.) But again, 

Defendant already argued this in the Motion. (Doc. 10, Pg. ID 67-68; Reply, Doc. 14, Pg. 
ID 110.) Defendant does not provide any new reasoning for why the Report should adopt 
this test.                                                                
    Second, Defendant states that, if the Court applies the ordinary person test, “it 
becomes clear that Plaintiff has failed to adequately allege the disclosure of her specific 
identity.” (Objections, Doc. 19, Pg. ID 184.) The Objection continues by explaining why 

new case law is applicable here. (Id. (citing  v. Flipps Media, Inc., F.4th__, 2025 WL 1256641, 
at *1 (2d. Cir. May 1, 2025)).) While the Report was filed only days after the Solomon 
decision came out, and does not mention Solomon, the reasoning behind the court’s 
decision in Solomon mirrors the same arguments Defendant made in its briefing: a 
Facebook ID is not personally identifiable information. (Id.) Defendant’s Motion states 

this same principle, albeit by citing different cases. (See Motion, Doc. 10, Pg. ID 71-72.)  
    And, if the Court does consider Defendant’s Objection novel because of its use of 
Solomon, the Objection is still not well-taken. As Plaintiff aptly points out, Solomon is an 
unbinding decision and sits “in stark contrast to the vast majority of federal district and 
circuit courts that have held” the opposite about a Facebook ID. (Response, Doc. 20, Pg. 

ID 195.) As the Report states, an individual need only include the Facebook ID in the 
Facebook URL to pull up a user’s entire profile, which contains the name and other 
identifiable information for that user. (Report, Doc. 18, Pg. ID 163-64 (collecting cases).) 
And, the Sixth Circuit has clearly stated that it “break[s] with the Second and Seventh 
Circuits’ approach,” and finds that personally identifiable information does not always 
have to “identify a person as having requested or obtained specific video materials or 

services” for purposes of a VPPA claim. Salazar, 133 F.4th at 651-52. Thus, the Court 
agrees with the Report’s finding that a Facebook ID constitutes personally identifiable 
information.                                                              
                          *    *    *                                    
    The Court also notes that Defendant filed two Notices of Supplemental Authority 
on July 9, 2025, and July 21, 2025, to inform the Court of recent decisions affirming the 

dismissal of VPPA claims. (Docs. 21, 24.)  To start, Defendant asserts that a new Second 
Circuit decision supports its argument that personally identifiable information does not 
include “information that only a sophisticated technology company could use in order to 
identify a consumer’s video-watching habits.” (Id. (quoting Hughes v. National Football 
League, No. 24-2656, 2025 WL 1720295 (2d. Cir. June 20, 2025)) (cleaned up).)  

    Plaintiff, however, responded to this Notice and requested that the Court not 
consider the supplemental authority for several reasons. First, Plaintiff points out that the 
Hughes decision is a Summary Order, and, as such, does not have precedential effect. 
(Response, Doc. 22, Pg. ID 211.) Second, Plaintiff asserts that the opinion provides “no 
persuasive value for the compelling reasons” articulated in her Response to Defendant’s 

Objections. (Id.) Put differently, Plaintiff states that Defendant’s reliance on this opinion 
contradicts other arguments it has made that leave room for “numerical identifiers to 
qualify” as personal identifiable information. (Id.) Finally, Plaintiff notes that, in Solomon, 
a Second Circuit case involving the same issues as Hughes, the appellant has requested 
an en banc hearing, which is pending and “may imminently lead to the reversal of both 
Solomon and Hughes.” (Id. at 212.)                                        

    In its Reply, Defendant focuses solely on Plaintiff’s argument that the Summary 
Order in Hughes does not have a precedential effect. (Reply, Doc. 23, Pg. ID 244-45.) 
Defendant claims that the Second Circuit found no need to give precedential effect to 
Hughes because it reinforces the decision in Solomon. (Id. at 244.) The Court, however, 
reiterates that it did not consider Solomon because it is unbinding and sits “in stark 
contrast” to the majority of district courts. For the same reason, the Court does not find 

Hughes to be persuasive and will not consider it here.                    
    The second Notice informs the Court of a recent decision within the Southern 
District of Ohio. (Notice, Doc. 24 (citing Lovett v. Continued.com, LLC, 1:24-CV-590, 2025 
WL 1809719 (S.D. Ohio July 1, 2025)).) But, Plaintiff correctly points out that the plaintiff 
in Lovett failed to allege that the defendant disclosed the specific video URL to Meta, 

unlike Plaintiff’s claims here. (Supplemental Memordandum, Doc. 25, Pg. ID 270-71.) 
Rather, the plaintiff only alleged that the defendant disclosed her subscription to the 
website where she accessed videos. (Id.) Further, the court in Lovett dismissed the claim 
without prejudice, and the plaintiff has since amended the complaint, bringing claims 
more similar to those here. (Id.) Thus, dismissing Plaintiff’s claims based on the dismissal 

in Lovett is inappropriate. The decision in Lovett does not affect this decision. 
                          *    *    *                                    
    As required by 28 U.S.C. § 636(b) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(b), the 
Court has made a de novo review of the record in this case. Defendant’s Objections (Doc. 
19) are not well taken and, therefore, OVERRULED. Accordingly, the Court ADOPTS 
the Report and Recommendation (Doc. 18) and DENIES Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss 
(Doc. 10). 
     IT IS SO ORDERED. 

                                         UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 
                                         SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO 
                                                          ct 
                                     By:  MW oe   WH ‘abel 
                                        JUDGE MATTHEW W. McFARLAND