A group of 17 music publishers sued Twitter in Nashville, Tennessee, federal court on Wednesday, accusing the company of enabling thousands of copyright violations by allowing users to post music without a license.
Twitter drives user engagement with "countless
infringing copies of musical compositions," the lawsuit said.
Members of the National Music Publishers' Association,
including Sony Music Publishing, BMG Rights Management and Universal Music
Publishing Group, are seeking more than $250 million in damages for the alleged
infringement of nearly 1,700 copyrights.
The lawsuit said the longstanding infringement has gotten
worse since Elon Musk bought Twitter in October, and that other major platforms
like TikTok, Facebook and YouTube properly license music from the publishers.
Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
NMPA President David Israelite said in a statement that
Twitter "stands alone as the largest social media platform that has
completely refused to license the millions of songs on its service."
Twitter "routinely ignores" repeat infringement by
users who post tweets that contain unlicensed music, the lawsuit said. The
publishers said Twitter encourages user infringement, which increases
engagement and ad revenues while giving it an "unfair advantage" over
platforms that pay for music licenses.
"Twitter's internal affairs regarding matters pertinent
to this case are in disarray," the publishers said, noting deep cuts to
the company's legal and trust-and-safety teams since Musk took control. ©
Reuters