The defendants include Amazon, Apple, Deezer, Google, iHeartradio, Pandora, Rhapsody, 7digital, SoundCloud and YouTube, so this is a wide-sweeping effort on the part of PMR. The company says it has been proactive in the matter, offering licensing deals to all 10 defendants and educating them about their obligations regarding copyright laws. These efforts had little to no effect, though — the services have continued to stream the tracks without paying royalties.
PMR calls their actions a “blatant disregard of the Copyright Act.” The company is seeking “the maximum $150,000 for each act of willful infringement with respect to the copyrights involved in the action.” It’s unclear whether the company is seeking $150,000 per unlicensed track available on a given service or for every time one of those tracks has been streamed. PMR represents both emerging and chart-topping artists, including Wiz Khalifa, Gucci Mane and Fall Out Boy, so the company could be suing the defendants for huge sums of money, either way.
Royalty collection firms like PMR have their work cut out for them — major changes to the music industry have them navigating uncharted water. And while many of these shifts have been beneficial to musicians — just about anyone can have their music published alongside big acts thanks to companies like DistroKid — there are also new opportunities for big companies like Apple and Spotify to take advantage. Whether companies like PMR stand a chance against the legal defenses of tech giants remains to be seen.
In this article:
7digital, amazon music, Apple Music, av, business, copyright, copyright act, copyright infringement, copyright law, deezer, entertainment, iheartradio, lawsuit, music, music industry, music streaming, pandora, pmr, pro music rights, rhapsody, royalties, services, soundcloud, spotify, youtube
All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.