The United States District Court for the District of Nevada granted Defendant Google, Inc.’s motions for summary judgment, finding Defendant did not infringe Plaintiff web site author’s copyright by maintaining a copy of Plaintiff’s works in its online cache and allowing search engine users access to the cached copy. Defendant uses an automated program (“Googlebot”) to crawl the Internet, analyzing and cataloging web pages. The Googlebot also makes a copy of the pages it finds and stores them in a temporary cache on Defendant’s servers. Web site owners can include a “meta-tag” in the computer code for their web pages to tell Defendant not to cache their pages (“no-archive meta-tag”). These meta-tags are an industry standard. When a user’s search results are displayed, Defendant shows a large link to relevant web pages and a smaller link to its cached copy of each page (unless the web page owner opted out through the use of meta-tags). The cached copy is useful when the web page is inaccessible, the web page has changed, or when users are having trouble finding their search terms (which Defendant highlights in the cached copy). The cached copy has a disclaimer at the top of the page stating it is Defendant’s copy of the page and providing two links to the actual website.