Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Even More Karoake . . .

Thank God copyright was invented to protect song owners against karoake. It appears that the karoake wars continue, and the battleground is the Ninth Circuit. Now the karoake record producers are suing each other and using copyright.

Who? Sybersound sued twelve competitors. What for? Cheating. Sybersound said its competitors represented to buyers that their songs were properly licensed, but they were not, and that they were using songs to which Sybersound held the copyright license. Sybersound attempts to couch a unique Lanham Act claim, i.e., that their competitors were improperly claiming to have copyright licenses, and Sybersound directly made a copyright infringement claim as a licensee.

To be fair, Sybersound says that the false representations to customers about having copyright permissions are the Lanham Act violations. But the Court would not go for this "theory":
Under copyright law, only copyright owners and exclusive licensees of copyright may enforce a copyright or a license. See 17 U.S.C. § 501(b) (conferring standing only to the “legal or beneficial owner of an exclusive right” who “is entitled . . . to institute an action for any infringement . . . while he or she is the owner of it”); Silvers, 402 F.3d at 885. Therefore, third party strangers and nonexclusive licensees cannot bring suit to enforce a copyright, even if an infringer is operating without a license to the detriment of a nonexclusive licensee who has paid full value for his license. See 3-10 Melville B. Nimmer;David Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright, § 10.02 [B] [1] (2007).
Does that really respond to the Plaintiff's theory?

The Ninth Circuit finds a Supreme Court case, Dastar, addressing the interplay between the Lanham Act and copyright. There, an author used the Lanham Act to claim that, after a television series passed into the public domain, the producer failed to attribute the series to him, and the Supremes said that using the Lanham Act to extend attribution of the source of goods through the Lanham Act would be granting a perpetual right to a facet of copyright, but it commented that making a misrepresentation would be a Lanham Act claim. So, Sybersound wins, right? Wrong. The Ninth Circuit argues that:
Construing the Lanham Act to cover misrepresentations about copyright licensing status as Sybersound urges would allow competitors engaged in the distribution of copyrightable materials to litigate the underlying copyright infringement when they have no standing to do so because they are nonexclusive licensees or third party strangers under copyright law, and we decline to do so.
That makes little sense to me.

Perhaps the explanation is the Sybersound was greedy, also suing in copyright even though its assignment was not exclusive. The Copyright Act permits exclusive rights to be chopped up and owned separately, to be effective as a transfer of ownership, the assignment must be exclusive. And only owners may sue in copyright.

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