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Litigation

District court allows music publishers’ copyright infringement lawsuit against X to move forward but dismisses several counts

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US District Judge Aleta A. Trauger from the District Court from the Middle District of Tennessee, Nashville Division has dismissed several counts in the copyright infringement lawsuit filed against social network X (previously Twitter) by the National Music Publishers' Association (NMPA) on behalf of a group of music publishers, but also allowed the procedure to continue. The NMPA  and 17 music publishers — including the three majors and a handful of indies such as Concord — filed a lawsuit in J...

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Emmanuel is a Washington, DC-based freelance journalist, blogger and media consultant, specialising in the entertainment business and cultural trends. He was the US editor for British music industry trade publication Music Week. Previously, he was the editor of Impact, a magazine for the music publishing community (2007-2009), the global editor of US trade publication Billboard (2003-2006), and the editor in chief of Billboard’s sister publication Music & Media (1997-2003).

Collective Management Organisations

PRS for Music files lawsuit against Valve Corporation’s gaming platform Steam

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British rights society PRS for Music has launched legal proceedings on March 4 against Valve Corporation, the parent company of Steam, for the unlicensed use of copyrighted repertoire from PRS by the gaming platform. "Since its launch in 2003, Valve has never obtained a license for its use of the rights managed by PRS on behalf of songwriters, composers, and music publishers," said PRS for Music in a statement, to explain the reason behind the proceedings. Steam, which brands itself as the ulti...

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Litigation

US Supreme Court rejects petition on AI-generated content’s copyright protection

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The US Supreme Court has declined to hear the Thaler v. Perlmutter case, which would have ruled whether an AI-generated work of art could be granted copyright protection under US law. The petition for certiorari was filed by Stephen Thaler, a computer scientist from Missouri, who was appealing a decision from a Federal Court of Appeals, which found that the US Copyright Office (USCO) appropriately rejected Thaler’s attempt to register an AI-generated visual art piece in 2018. Thaler built an AI ...

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Creative Industries

Dutch authors and journalists send cease-and-desist letter to Meta over the use of copyrighted works to train Llama

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The Dutch Association of Journalists (NVJ), the Authors’ Union (Auteursbond), and writers’ rights organisation Lira Foundation have sent a cease-and-desist letter to Meta, enjoining the parent company of Facebook and Instagram to using copyrighted material written by Dutch authors, reporters, and translators to train its Llama artificial intelligence models. NVJ General Secretary Thomas Bruning said the letter was a first step. If Meta fails to address the issue exposed in the letter, the organ...

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