Supreme Court reverses $1B copyright lawsuit
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision on Wednesday, ruled that an internet service provider is not liable in damages when its users unlawfully engage in copyright infringement.
The justices ruled in Cox Communications v. Sony Music Entertainment, a case that focused on $1 billion in damages a jury sought from Cox Communications, after users of the internet service were found illegally downloading and uploading copyrighted material from Sony.
The justices said Cox, headquartered in Atlanta, could be liable for infringement of copyrighted material only if it intended to do so.
“The intent required for contributory liability can be shown only if the party induced the infringement or the provided service is tailored to that infringement,” Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in the court’s majority opinion.
Sony, headquartered in Tokyo and with major offices in New York City and Culver, Calif., found 163,148 instances of illegal uploading and downloading of copyrighted material from users of Cox’s internet services.
“Under our precedents, a company is not liable as a copyright infringer for merely providing a service to the general public with knowledge that it will be used by some to infringe copyrights,” Thomas wrote.
Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson filed concurring opinions with the majority but warned against blanket pardons for companies that knowingly engage in second-hand copyright infringement.
“The majority, without any meaningful explanation, unnecessarily limits secondary liability even though this Court’s precedents have left open the possibility that other common-law theories of such liability, like aiding and abetting, could apply in the copyright context,” Sotomayor wrote.
Latest News Stories
GOP senators renew calls to nuke filibuster after voter ID bill languishes
Illinois Quick Hits: Four charged in alleged pharmacy burglary conspiracy
LA City Council member seeks to allow noncitizens to vote
Chicago loses 2,100 restaurant jobs as industry fights mandated wage hikes
State Senator, ‘angel parent’ want to let police work with ICE
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Casey-Westfield Board of Education for April 20, 2026
U.S. Supreme Court temporarily allows mail-order abortion pills
U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear Washington COVID-19 speech case
‘Project Freedom’ begins, two ships safely transit Strait of Hormuz
Supreme Court declines hearing Chicago gun sales case
Illinois Quick Hits: Google settlement wins praise from Illinois AG
Illinois diversity commission says businesses aren’t cooperating
U.S. House, Senate, governor on Ohio primary ballots Tuesday
Late Seventh-Inning Rally Lifts Casey-Westfield Baseball Over GCMS, 11-9