Supreme Court to hear Cox Communications music piracy case

New Supreme Court term gets underway; executive power on the docket
UPI

Dec. 1 (UPI) — The U.S. Supreme Court was set to hear arguments Monday on a case questioning the extent to which Internet service providers are responsible for policing music piracy.

The case pits Cox Communications against Sony Music Entertainment and more than 50 other record labels that represent artists such as Sabrina Carpenter, Givēon and Doechii. The outcome could have large ramifications for both sides, NPR reported.

Cox, the largest private broadband company in the United States, providing Internet to more than 6 million homes and businesses, asked the high court to rule on whether it can be held liable for Internet users who illegally pirate music via the company’s Internet service.

The request stems from a 2019 case in which a jury said that Cox should pay more than $1 billion in damages to the coalition of record companies for failing to do more to stop copyright violations. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals threw out the judgment after reviewing the case, but Cox has asked the Supreme Court to rule as well, USA Today reported.

The coalition of record labels accused Cox of failing to properly act on notices they sent the ISP about Internet users violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The Recording Industry of America pays an anti-piracy company to automatically send notices to Internet providers when it detects evidence of music piracy.

Cox had a 13-strike policy regarding copyright infringement, at which point the user’s account would be terminated. The coalition said Cox didn’t abide by its own policy.

“Cox made a deliberate and egregious decision to elevate its own profits over compliance with the law,” the coalition said.

Cox, however, said it should not be liable for the illegal actions of its users. The company said it never encouraged copyright violations and never made money off the illegal behavior.

Cox said it’s unreasonable for the company to be punished for not cutting off the Internet service “after receiving automated notices accusing an unknown user at a home or business” of copyright infringement. Lawyers said it would force Cox to cut off Internet service at an entire location based on a “bare accusation” against a single user. Hospitals, hotels and other businesses with hundreds of users would be subject to this policy.

“That notion turns Internet providers into Internet police and jeopardizes Internet access for millions of users,” a filing by Cox read.

The U.S. Justice Department, the American Civil Liberties Union, and businesses such as X and Google, have shown support for Cox in the case.

“Parents’ Internet access … may be terminated based on the conduct of their children — over even their children’s friends,” the ACLU wrote in a joint filing in the case. “A hospital that offers Internet access to dozens or even hundreds of patients and their families could find critical access shut off.”

A ruling in the case was expected this summer, NPR reported.

COMMENTS

Please let us know if you're having issues with commenting.