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
Committee Questions High School Weighted Grading System
P&Z Commission Advances Plan for Construction Debris Fill Operation on Brandon Road
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher School District Transportation Committee for Dec. 8, 2025
Regional Transit Agencies Tout New State Funding, Prepare for Shift to ‘NITA’
IL Dem touts ‘great job’ on transit, GOP candidate laments ‘bailout’ for Chicago
Bill designed to protect school kids from sexual misconduct
Illinois quick hits: More bills enacted into law; former ComEd CEO seeking Trump pardon
Pritzker enacts bills, including measure decoupling IL from federal tax code
WATCH: California co-leads suit over $100,000 H-1B visa fee
WATCH: Trump outlines AI order, calls Pritzker ‘totally unreasonable’
Entrepreneur’s supporters say case law may result in release
GOP lawmakers silent on Trump’s EO punishing state AI guardrails