Complaint Against Spotify (Additional 7 Publishers)
Complaint Against Spotify (Additional 7 Publishers)
Complaint Against Spotify (Additional 7 Publishers)
Defendant.
COMPLAINT
Digital, Inc.; J&J Ross Co., LLC; Lakshmi Puja Music Ltd.; Lindabet Music Corp.; Music By
Shay; Music Of The West; and Swinging Door Music (hereinafter collectively referred to as
Plaintiffs) against Defendant Spotify USA Inc. (Spotify or Defendant) for its unauthorized
use of the musical compositions listed in the attached Exhibits (the Infringed Works) in blatant
disregard of the exclusive rights that are vested in copyright owners. Examples of the iconic
songs involved in this action include: Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy, Heart, Hey There,
Very Good Year, When Youre Smiling, Cool Water, Tumbling Tumbleweeds, and
Ashokan Farewell.
2. Spotifys online interactive music streaming service is offered to end users in the
basis. Spotify distributes phonorecords embodying musical compositions to its end users through
interactive streaming and limited downloads available on their computers and mobile devices
(hereinafter Spotifys interactive streaming service). Upon information and belief, Spotify also
makes server copies, in the United States, of phonorecords embodying the musical compositions
3. As alleged more fully below, Spotify has built a multi-billion dollar business with
no assets other than the songs made available on its digital platform. Yet, as recent class action
lawsuits and settlements against it have firmly established, Spotify built its behemoth by
willfully infringing on the copyrights of creators of music worldwide without building the
infrastructure needed to ensure that songs appearing on the Spotify service were properly
licensed or that appropriate royalties were paid on time (or at all) in compliance with the United
States Copyright Act. Spotifys apparent business model from the outset was to commit willful
copyright infringement first, ask questions later, and try to settle on the cheap when inevitably
sued.
4. For the reasons discussed below, prior lawsuits and settlements are woefully
inadequate (at least in part because the lions share of the money goes into the pockets of the
major publishing companies, whose affiliated record labels own a substantial share of Spotify in
the aggregate and thus have no incentive to truly seek appropriate redress for Spotifys
exploitation, or punish Spotify sufficiently for its willful infringement. Spotifys actions since its
launch have not only been willful, but brazenly so, and justify the imposition of the maximum
award of statutory damages in the amount of $150,000.00 for each act of copyright infringement.
5. There are 232 copyrighted works involved in this action that are collectively listed
on Exhibit A attached hereto. Any license Spotify may have had to reproduce and distribute
these compositions through its interactive streaming service was terminated, no later than April
of 2017, following the termination letters sent to Spotify in March of 2017, for failure to comply
with the law and applicable requirements. Yet, on information and belief, Spotify has continued
to reproduce and/or distribute these musical compositions through its interactive streaming
service and has committed willful copyright infringement thereby. Plaintiffs have also been able
to confirm that, at least since 2015, and, upon information and belief, since inception, it received
attached hereto, meaning that it is likely that no license was ever obtained by Spotify, and
Spotify has been committing willful copyright infringement with respect to these musical
compositions since inception. The same is true of the 73 Exhibit A musical compositions,
separated out on Exhibit C attached hereto, which, upon information and belief, have also been
reproduced and/or distributed on Spotifys interactive streaming service but no payment was ever
received by Plaintiffs. The only difference between the Exhibit B musical compositions, and
those identified on Exhibit C, is that Plaintiffs have been able to identify ISRC codes (explained
below) with respect to the Exhibit B musical compositions. Nonetheless, upon information and
belief, the Exhibit C musical compositions have at least one associated sound recording that
embodies the composition that has been reproduced and/or distributed on Spotifys interactive
on Exhibit D attached hereto, for which incomplete or partial payments have been made by
Spotify and Spotify otherwise failed to comply with Section 115 of the United States Copyright
Act. Any license Spotify ever had related to these musical compositions, and all other Exhibit A
musical compositions, was therefore terminated for failure to comply with Section 115 of the
United States Copyright Act. In all, upon information and belief, and based upon market share
and Spotifys own stream count numbers provided within its service, there are innumerable
6. Spotify has never provided proof of licensing with respect to any of the Exhibit A
7. In light of the willful actions of Spotify, including willful blindness, anything less
than the maximum $150,000 statutory damage award for each of the Infringed Works involved
herein would encourage infringement, amount to a slap on the wrist, and reward a multi-billion
dollar company, about to go public, that rules the interactive streaming market through a pattern
8. Each of the Plaintiffs are publishers who have contracted with the Songwriters
Guild of America, Inc. (hereinafter SGA) to allow SGA to be the exclusive administrator for all
9. SGA is a Tennessee Corporation with its principal place of business located at 210
Jamestown Park Rd., Suite 100, Brentwood, Tennessee 37027. SGA is an advocacy group
founded in 1931 to advance, promote, and benefit the profession of songwriters. SGA is a
preeminent advocate working in Washington, D.C. and working with agencies around the world to
songwriters and their estates with complete, full-service catalog administration, including
copyright termination and recapture of rights, song licensing, song placement, and royalty
collection.
10. SGA is the exclusive administrator for Plaintiffs and provides full-service
administration services for the Plaintiffs, including negotiating synch licenses, issuing direct
copyrights with the United States Copyright Office, registering with Performing Rights
Organizations, and all other day to day administration functions necessary for the Plaintiffs out of
11. Specifically, all royalty statements, licensing requests, licensing inquiries, and
notices flow through SGAs corporate office in Brentwood, Tennessee. All royalty related support
for the Plaintiffs and other SGA publishers flows through the Brentwood, Tennessee office for
processing. All royalty payments and statements are generated in the Brentwood office and
distributed to the Plaintiffs. All copyright administration duties for the Plaintiffs are completed
12. SGA administers Plaintiffs copyrights for each of the Infringed Works, listed on
the attached Exhibits A-D, all of which have either been duly registered with the United States
Copyright Office.
13. Plaintiff A4V Digital Inc. (A4V) is a California entity with its principal place of
business at 30402 Vineyard Ln., Costaic, CA 91384. SGA is the duly authorized copyright
administrator for A4V, and operates out of SGAs Brentwood, Tennessee office.
14. Plaintiff J&J Ross Co, LLC (J&J) is a New York entity with its principal place of
business at 18 rivers Edge Drive, Apt. 101, Terrytown, NY 10591. SGA is the duly authorized
copyright administrator for J&J and operates out of SGAs Brentwood, Tennessee office.
15. Plaintiff Lakshmi Puja Music Ltd. (Lakshmi) is a Connecticut entity with its
principal place of business at 32 Silver Ridge Common, Weston, CT 06883. SGA is the duly
authorized copyright administrator for Lakshmi and operates out of SGAs Brentwood, Tennessee
office.
16. Plaintiff Lindabet Music Corp. (Lindabet) is a New York entity with its principle
place of business at 22 Beverly Road, Great Neck, NY 11021. SGA is the duly authorized
copyright administrator for Lindabet and operates out of SGAs Brentwood, Tennessee office.
17. Plaintiff Music By Shay is a California entity with its principle place of business at
2948 Sailor Ave., Ventura, CA 93001. SGA is the duly authorized copyright administrator for
18. Plaintiff Music of the West is a Nevada entity with its principle place of business at
2216 Valdina Street, Henderson, NV 89044. SGA is the duly authorized copyright administrator
for Music of the West, and operates out of SGAs Brentwood, Tennessee office.
19. Plaintiff Swinging Door Music is a New York entity with its principle place of
business at PO Box 49, Saugerties, NY 12477. SGA is the duly authorized copyright administrator
for Swing Door Music, and operates out of SGAs Brentwood, Tennessee office.
business at 45 W. 18th Street, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10011. Spotify maintains a corporate office
21. The jurisdiction of this Court with respect to the copyright infringement claims is
based upon 28 U.S.C. 1331 and 1338(a) in that the controversy arises under the Copyright Act
and Copyright Revision Act of 1976 (17 U.S.C. 101 et seq.), which is within the exclusive
22. This Court has general personal jurisdiction over Defendant because Defendant has
continuous and systematic contacts within the Middle District of Tennessee such that it can be
23. This Court has specific personal jurisdiction over Spotify for numerous reasons,
24. Upon information and belief, Spotify has maintained a strong presence in
Nashville, including its Nashville office, since 2013 and is dedicated to building Spotifys brand
and relationships within the Nashville music community. Upon information and belief, Spotifys
Nashville office is designed to broker deals with, as well as secure licenses for its interactive
streaming services from, record labels, music publishers, and others in Nashville and elsewhere.
25. Upon information and belief, Spotify specifically targets Tennessee through its
licensing and distribution agreements. Upon information and belief, Spotify provides targeted ads
to individuals in Tennessee and Tennessee residents, including those who have streamed the
Infringed Works in Tennessee. Upon information and belief, Spotify provides its interactive
streaming platform to individuals in Tennessee and Tennessee residents, who have used such
26. Upon information and belief, Spotify has hired top executives from within the
music industry to head its streaming operations in the Nashville office. Spotifys Nashville based
employees include executives such as Copeland Isaacson, who heads Spotifys Label & Artist
Relations division for the Nashville office, and John Marks, who has been named Spotifys Global
Head of Country Music Programming and other employees, including employees directly involved
in songwriter relations.
users located in Tennessee. Upon information and belief, Spotify has thousands of registered users
in Tennessee, and the musical compositions involved in this action have been streamed to users
throughout Tennessee.
28. Furthermore, SGA, the entity that administers the publishing rights of each of the
Plaintiffs and collects royalties for the Plaintiffs and for each of the musical compositions at issue
in this case, is a Tennessee corporation and its principal place of business is Tennessee. As a
result, any action that Spotify takes or fails to take (such as a failure to pay royalties) with regard to
the Plaintiffs or the Infringed Works represents a conscious, harmful act by Spotify directed at a
Tennessee citizen. Because of the substantial rights held by SGA and the resulting common
nucleus between the Plaintiffs and Spotify, the harm of Spotifys illegal action is centered on
Music City (i.e., Nashville, Tennessee). As a result, the brunt of the harm caused by Spotifys
actions is felt in Tennessee. The Middle District of Tennessee has a considerable interest in
adjudicating disputes affecting Tennessee residents that administer the Plaintiffs rights, and, as a
result, are forced to deal with Spotifys infringing activities within the bounds of Tennessee. Upon
information and belief, limited jurisdictional discovery would uncover a number of other
29. Spotify has been put on notice by SGA of the illegal infringements, and has
nonetheless continued to infringe the SGA compositions. Specifically, the notice sent by SGA on
behalf of all Plaintiff publishers in this action contains a single Brentwood, Tennessee address for
SGA. Spotify was thus, through this notification, and prior communications with SGA, well aware
that SGA is a Tennessee entity. Spotify was also well aware of its infringing activities prior to
being placed on notice through other complaints, lawsuits, and otherwise, but has continuously
30. Venue is proper in this District pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1391 and 1400(a) because
Spotify is subject to personal jurisdiction in this Judicial District and has committed unlawful acts
of infringement in this Judicial District by directing its illegal activities against a Tennessee citizen.
FACTS
31. Plaintiffs are each independent music publishers with an ownership interest in
hundreds of musical compositions registered with the United States Copyright Office. Many of
these compositions have achieved worldwide success and represent a diverse range of the
creative community. Each has entrusted administration of their catalogs to SGA which is
32. Each of the Plaintiff publishers own the publishing rights of the musical
compositions that Spotify has infringed upon. (See Exhibit A, i.e., Infringed Works).
33. Spotify does not have a license to display, reproduce, and/or distribute the
Infringed Works through its interactive streaming service due to either not procuring an
appropriate license as required, or due to losing any license it may have had by not complying
with the law and applicable requirements when placed on notice and asked to do so. As the
34. Spotify is an interactive music streaming service (among other business services)
that allows its users to access and enjoy its catalog of musical recordings using its downloadable
application and web-based platform. In fact, Spotify identifies itself as the largest interactive
streaming music service in the United Sates. (Comments of Spotify USA, Inc. to USCO). As an
interactive service, Spotify must obtain either a direct or compulsory license allowing for the
reproduction and/or distribution of each musical composition on its interactive streaming service.
Spotifys business model offers tiered participation levels to its users, including a premium
subscription level that allows users to interactively stream any song without ads, and a lower
tier, non-subscription level that is supported by advertisements which play at regular intervals
during use in exchange for providing users the ability to interactively stream nearly the entire
Spotify library of music for free. In 2016, Spotify claimed it had more than 100 million global
users that streamed songs hundreds of billions of times, which included both paying subscribers
as well as users that utilize its free, ad-supported platform. In March of 2017, Spotify announced
it hit a milestone claiming it has more than 50 million paying users. In June of 2017, Spotify
35. Spotify also allows its users to download specific songs. On Spotifys website,
Spotify urges consumers, With Spotify Premium, you can download music so its available
36. Spotify must obtain either a direct or compulsory license in order to make,
reproduce, and/or distribute phonorecords embodying the musical compositions offered through
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37. To better understand Spotify and its service, and its willfully infringing behavior, as
well as how it has been able to grow in value despite the music industrys awareness of its non-
existent and non-compliant systems, it is important to understand the background of the ever-
evolving music industry and how enforcement of copyright law has grown from an industry of
38. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing companies
became popular and allowed individuals to share music over the Internet. In response to these
companies allowing users to share copyrighted works without proper licenses, the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA), a trade organization comprised of United States record
companies, filed lawsuits against major P2P file sharing companies, including Napster, Scour,
39. On September 8, 2003, the RIAA sued 261 American music fans for sharing
music on P2P file sharing networks. Within five years, the recording industry had filed, settled,
or threatened legal actions against at least 30,000 individuals, including children, grandparents,
unemployed single mothers, and college professors, and sought and obtained judgments in many
cases for the maximum $150,000 statutory damage award per illegal download. These same
record labels and others who were so vigilant in protecting their copyrights now own part of
Spotify and are set to make a fortune through Spotifys public offering.
40. Once P2P file sharing networks were effectively shut down, major music
companies turned to so-called legal download and streaming services as a way to generate revenue
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41. Spotify was established in 2005 by Daniel Ek and Martin Lorentzon in Stockholm,
Sweden. The company released its first public beta version in 2007. Spotify then launched on the
Apple operating system in 2007. Spotify began advertising through its interactive applications in
2008 and officially launched in the United States in June 2011. Upon information and belief, at the
time of its United States launch, Spotify had between 15,000,000 and 25,000,000 sound recordings
available through its interactive streaming service. Upon information and belief, the number of
42. By 2011, Spotify had reached 1,000,000 paid subscribers. By 2013, Spotify had
24,000,000 active users who had streamed 4.5 billion hours of music in 2013 alone.
43. By that time, Spotify had raised enormous amounts of money to support its
business. Spotify originally raised two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000.00), and then, by
the end of 2013, raised another three hundred fifty million dollars ($350,000,000.00), bringing its
44. By 2015, Spotify announced it had 75,000,000 users overall, which included
45. By the middle of 2016, Spotify raised yet another two billion dollars
($500,000,000.00), bringing its total capital raised to over two billion five hundred million
dollars ($2,500,000,000.00).
46. Under the United States Copyright Act, the owner of a copyright is entitled to
certain exclusive rights, including the right to reproduce and distribute a musical work. Every
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recording itself and one copyright for the underlying musical composition. Spotify will often
make different recordings of a composition available for streaming on-demand, which Spotify
displays through an interface in conjunction with the name of the artist performing the recording,
the name of the recording and other metadata, and a play button that the user can click to
play the song. In all cases, to allow for the on-demand interactive stream of a song, Spotify must
have two separate licenses and pay two separate royalties. One license is for the sound recording
and the second, separate license is for the embodied musical composition. The former generates
revenue for the record label, while the latter generates revenue for songwriters and their music
publishers.
47. A mechanical license grants the right to reproduce and distribute copyrighted
musical compositions for use on compact discs, records, tapes, ringtones, permanent digital
downloads, interactive streams, and other digital formats. Anyone wishing to use a musical work
is required to license the composition separately from the recording either through a direct
voluntary mechanical license secured by negotiating with individual copyright owners, or, in the
48. Spotify has expressly and repeatedly acknowledged that Spotify, an interactive
streaming service, must secure rights to reproduce and distribute the musical works embodied in
its sound recordings, or else face the crushing statutory damages available under the United
States Copyright Act. To operate the Spotify Service, Spotify needs to secure multiple rights
from multiple copyright owners. These rights include, among others, the right to reproduce
sound recordings and the musical works embodied therein, the right to distribute sound
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recordings and the musical works embodied therein by means of digital audio transmissions.
49. In order to obtain a compulsory license under the Copyright Act, as detailed in
Section 115, a licensee, such as Spotify, is required to send a notice of intent to use a musical
composition (NOI) to each copyright owner before or within thirty days after making a
phonorecord embodying the musical composition, and before distributing the work. If the name
and address of the copyright owner is not known, the distributor, after putting effort into finding
them, is then required to file the NOI in the Licensing Division of the Copyright Office, and then
submit the statutory filing fee for each title listed in the notice in a single payment and make
checks payable to the Register of Copyrights or authorize deduction from a deposit account for
50. The NOI serves the important role of requiring the music service to connect the
sound recording to the composition before it makes the sound recording live so when it generates
revenue the service knows whom to pay and alerts the copyright owner(s) to the use of their
musical compositions and the right to fair and legally required compensation for that use. Under
United States Copyright law, the failure to timely file or serve an NOI forecloses the possibility
of a compulsory license and, in the absence of a negotiated license, renders the making and
musical composition.
51. According to Section 115 of the Copyright Act, once a license for the musical
composition is obtained, the licensee must follow the terms of a direct license or the statutory
requirements for a compulsory license which include, but are not limited to: (1) making accurate
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accountings to the copyright owner or authorized agent, (4) making timely payments to the
administrator on or before the 20th day of each month for every phonorecord/recording made and
distributed in accordance with the license, and (5) curing any breach of these requirements
within 30 days of the notification. Spotify, like every other person or entity, must obtain a license
and comply with the requirements of the license for the works it includes in its catalog.
52. Subpart B of the Code of Federal Regulations 385 establishes rates and terms
of royalty payments for interactive streams and limited downloads of musical works by
subscription and nonsubscription digital music services in accordance with the provisions of 17
U.S.C. 115. 385.10(a). Spotify, a licensee that, pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 115, makes or
authorizes interactive streams or limited downloads of musical works shall comply with the
53. Prior to launching in the United States, Spotify made some efforts to license
sound recordings by reaching out to labels and distributors for the metadata of each recording,
but did not attempt to collect any information about the compositions that each recording
failed to ask for such information. Additionally, in a race to be the first to market, Spotify made
the deliberate decision to distribute sound recordings without building any internal infrastructure
to license compositions properly or comply with the requirements of Section 115 of the
Copyright Act.
54. Spotify did not build proper infrastructure or require sound recording rights
holders to provide data as to what specific composition the sound recording embodies. Upon
information and belief, Spotify makes recordings live for streaming without, in many cases: (1)
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knowing or caring whether the compositions have been licensed. Songwriters and publishers are
therefore placed in the very difficult position of identifying the compositions streaming on
55. Instead of attempting to comply with United States Copyright law and build a
proper system to identify the compositions available through its service, Spotify contracted with
a third-party company called the Harry Fox Agency (HFA). HFA is a provider of rights
management, licensing, and royalty services for the United States music industry that specifically
issues licenses, and collects and distributes royalties on behalf of musical copyright owners. At
the time of contracting with Spotify, HFA was owned by the National Music Publishing
Association (NMPA), a trade group representing the interests of its members, including, but
not limited to, the major music companies that will reap the financial benefits of a Spotify public
offering. In October 2015, the NMPA sold HFA for a reported twenty million dollars
($20,000,000.00) to the private equity owned United States performing rights organization
SESAC. Upon information and belief, approximately ten to fifteen percent (10% to 15%) of the
sale price was held in an escrow account to be liquidated at a future date if there were no
unforeseen financial liabilities against HFA, for example, not getting licenses or paying
56. At the time that Spotify hired HFA, HFA had a database with less than the
number of recordings and compositions available in the Spotify library. Between this insufficient
database, Spotifys piecemeal system, and HFAs own lack of a system capable of complying
with the statutory requirements for compulsory licensing, copyright infringement was assured.
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that allowed for massive infringement from its launch in the United States in June 2011.
57. Upon information and belief, there are approximately 35 billion (35,000,000,000)
unpaid streams that occurred from June of 2011 to the end of 2015. This means Spotify failed to
NMPA communication with its members, this figure is estimated to increase to another 140
billion (140,000,000,000) to 280 billion (280,000,000,000) unpaid streams totaling between sixty
through 2019. Spotify has not only admitted to its failure to pay out these royalties, but also has
shown it knew it was unlicensed for many of them and, if licensed, was not paying them
accurately, on time, or in compliance with any of the other Section 115 requirements, thereby
58. Nevertheless, despite raising over two and one-half billion dollars
matters worse, when Spotifys scheme is discovered by a rights holder, and Spotify is notified of
lack of a license or termination of licenses due to the failure to comply with legal requirements,
Spotify nonetheless continues to willfully and knowingly exploit the compositions, just as
59. Spotifys history is riddled with these notifications. It has previously been pursued
for failure to properly license compositions or pay for licenses, most notably by the NMPA on
behalf of its membership. Spotify was quick to enter into a settlement agreement that required it to
pay out the fifteen million seven hundred thousand dollars ($15,700,000.00) in unpaid royalties it
was holding onto along with an additional five million dollar ($5,000,000.00) penalty to those
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woefully insufficient financially and nothing more than a way to allow the major music companies,
who are the largest members of the NMPA, to help Spotify along to a public offering as, upon
information and belief, collectively their affiliated record labels own over 18% of Spotify and
stand to make over seven hundred million dollars ($700,000,000.00) each with Spotifys thirteen
60. In addition, the NMPA settlement did nothing to resolve the outstanding issues with
the Spotify licensing and royalty payment system as the settlement allowed Spotify to continue to
not pay accurately and did not require it to build any systems moving forward. Add to this that the
NMPA settlement only applies to the select members of the NMPA. Finally, the settlement itself
encouraged the continued infringement by Spotify as evidenced by the NMPAs recent June, 2017
email that indicated that the amount of unpaid royalties would grow after the settlement agreement
was entered into (meaning Spotify was not required to put in the needed compliancy systems).
Spotify was and continues to be abundantly aware that its systems were not and are not working
and that it was and is non-compliant with the terms of any license it may have entered into.
61. In addition to the NMPA settlement for non-compliance and infringement, Spotify
also agreed to settle a class action lawsuit for forty three million four hundred thousand dollars
($43,400,000.00). The stated intent of the settlement is to compensate rights holders for Spotifys
years of infringing actions. However, the settlement is also woefully insufficient to pay songwriters
and publishers for the infringement by Spotify. Upon information and belief, there are over
100,000 unique individuals who meet the criteria to be in the class with an interest in
approximately 8,000,000 compositions. Upon information and belief, the class attorneys will be
taking approximately 25% of the settlement payout, which leaves, approximately, a mere thirty-
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the payout for each owner, Spotify will be allowed to walk away after paying approximately four
dollars ($4.00) per infringed composition. Such a settlement is essentially an empty gesture that
62. The non-financial terms of the class action settlement are also unacceptable as they
force class members to license their works to Spotify moving forward whether they wish to do so
or not. In addition, if Spotify breaches the terms of the license, which it has already indicated it will
do in the NMPA settlement, the rights-holder can never terminate the license as the class
settlement is forcing the rights-holder to grant a license in perpetuity. Therefore, even if Spotify
breaches and does not cure, Spotify can never be held liable for infringement. Spotify now has a
license and no incentive to build the required systems as there is no penalty if they continue to
operate without doing so. In effect, Spotify is being rewarded for willfully infringing on
copyrights.
63. Upon information and belief, a number of major record labels, including Sony
BMG, Universal Music Group, Warner Music, and EMI, allowed Spotify to use their sound
recordings in its service in exchange for being allowed to purchase a stake in Spotify at below
market value. In some cases, equity in Spotify was provided to sound recording rights holders for
no additional compensation. As a result of these deals, upon information and belief, the major
record labels own an approximate eighteen percent (18%) stake in Spotify. With a successful
Spotify public offering, this allows the labels to potentially generate over half a billion dollars
each, none of which they need to share with the copyright creators, performing artists, or
songwriters. These record labels, who control their affiliated publishing companies, therefore had
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Copyright laws is clearly demonstrated in this case, which shows specific efforts by Plaintiffs,
65. Due to its belief that Spotify had not properly licensed musical compositions
owned by Plaintiffs and was not properly paying royalties for Spotifys exploitation of specific
musical compositions owned by Plaintiffs and administered by SGA, SGA and Plaintiffs set out
to determine whether the compositions that they own and/or administer were properly licensed
66. Each recording delivered to Spotify and made available to stream on its service is
required to have a unique 12 digit alphanumeric code called an International Standard Recording
Code (ISRC). The ISRC code is the international identification system for sound recordings.
Each ISRC is a unique and permanent identifier for a specific recording, independent of the
format on which it appears (CD, audio file, digital version for streaming, etc.) or the rights
holders involved. Only one ISRC is to be issued to a track, and an ISRC can never represent
67. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has been appointed by
the International ISRC Agency to oversee the ISRC system within the United States and its
territories. As the United States Agency, RIAA promotes and monitors the ISRC system within
the United States and its territories as well as issues and assigns ISRCs. Spotify requires that
each sound recording delivered to them have an ISRC in order for that recording to be eligible to
be available to stream in its service. Spotify uses ISRCs in their royalty statements as it provides
to record labels and music publishers a list of each recording and its associated ISRC that has
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recordings (while including the associated ISRCs), does not include all of the compositional data
(including identification of songwriter(s) and music publisher(s)) for the underlying composition
embodied in a sound recording that Spotify makes available for interactive streaming, which
makes it very difficult for music publishers to know for certain whether their musical
compositions are streaming on Spotify, and to ensure that Spotify is paying proper royalties for
68. As a result, SGA and Plaintiffs, through painstaking analysis, have identified
ISRCs for many of the musical compositions involved in this action (e.g., the Exhibit B musical
compositions), while the remaining compositions (e.g., the Exhibit C musical compositions) are
all associated with sound recordings, which, upon information and belief, have also been
Plaintiffs, and, upon information and belief, without a license. Spotifys opaque and incomplete
reporting makes it very difficult, if not impossible, to identify the extent of its infringement
69. Once SGA and Plaintiffs discovered that Spotify was not accurately paying
royalties on many compositions, and paying no royalties at all for some compositions, they
demanded proof of any licensing from Spotify, as required under 37 C.F.R. 201.18, and gave
specific notice to terminate any rights Spotify may have claimed it had to reproduce and/or
distribute the sound recordings that embody its compositions through Spotifys interactive
streaming service. Spotify did not provide any licenses or proof of licensing. SGA and Plaintiffs
then checked each Spotify royalty statement and payment made to Plaintiffs dating back to April
of 2015, which is the earliest date on which itemized HFA statements are available with ISRC
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compositions that were live on Spotify. Through this research, SGA and Plaintiffs identified
many sound recordings embodying SGA and Plaintiffs compositions that were, and are, live on
Spotify and had been reproduced and/or distributed through Spotifys interactive streaming
service, yet no payment has ever been made. In addition, SGA and Plaintiffs identified
compositions where no payment for any streaming sound recording had ever been paid. This
pattern strongly indicates that the compositions identified on Exhibits B and C were never
licensed.
70. Based on this tangible evidence, and the failure to otherwise comply with Section
115 of the Copyright Act, SGA and Plaintiffs determined Spotify was in breach of United States
71. On or about March 27, 2017, SGA, as the administrator of the Plaintiffs, sent
letters to Spotify notifying them of breach with respect to specific compositions owned by the
Plaintiff publishers and other publishers, including the Exhibit A musical compositions, demanding
proof of licensing, as well as notifying Spotify that it had no right to reproduce and/or distribute the
Infringed Works through its interactive streaming service, and that it did not have the right to
otherwise exploit the musical compositions contained in these catalogs. The notice also included a
detailed listing of each composition owned and/or controlled by SGA on behalf of Plaintiffs,
including the songwriter name, publisher name, and percentage controlled, that Spotify was
infringing upon.
72. SGA and Plaintiffs notified Spotify that it had neither negotiated a direct
mechanical license for the use of the musical compositions in these publishing catalogs nor
complied with the requirements for issuing a compulsory license pursuant to Section 115 of the
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was not able to find one, and that it was putting Spotify on notice that it was in breach.
73. SGA and Plaintiffs specifically informed Spotify that as a distributor of sound
recordings, it was required to either obtain a direct mechanical license, or comply with the
compulsory license provisions of Section 115, by sending the qualifying NOI to the copyright
owner or to the Copyright Office before or within thirty (30) days after making, and before
distributing, any phonorecords embodying the compositions. Additionally, SGA and Plaintiffs
informed Spotify that they did not have any record of timely and valid NOIs with regard to the
compositions owned by Plaintiffs or administered by SGA. SGA and Plaintiffs further informed
Spotify they were not aware of any valid direct licenses and accountings nor payments made
thereunder.
74. SGA and Plaintiffs put Spotify on notice that [f]ailure to timely serve or file a
valid NOI forecloses the possibility of a compulsory license and, in the absence of a negotiated
license, renders the making and distribution of phonorecords actionable as acts of infringement
under and fully subject to the remedies provided by the Copyright Act.
75. SGA and Plaintiffs put Spotify on notice that its distribution of the recordings
embodying the compositions at issue have been infringing, and continue to infringe, copyrights
in the Infringed Works. SGA and Plaintiffs further notified Spotify that Spotifys continued
76. On or about April 13, 2017, SGA and Plaintiffs re-sent the same letters previously
sent in March of 2017 to assure delivery and to reiterate Spotifys breach and willful copyright
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copyright owner or authorized agent of the owner on or before the 20th day of each month for
every phonorecord made and distributed in accordance with the license. The monthly statement
Under Compulsory License for Making and Distributing Phonorecords. See 37 C.F.R.
210.16.
78. Spotify further failed to comply with 37 C.F.R. 210.16 by failing to file a
complying with copyright law and sending a NOI or obtaining a proper license, Spotify chose to
willfully infringe Plaintiffs rights. Because of this, and the other facts mentioned above,
Plaintiffs specifically gave notice of intention to terminate any license that Spotify could argue
they had or any license they may have had for the compositions at issue in this litigation.
79. As Section 115 indicates, a licensor has the right to terminate any type of Section
115 license for failure to cure any provision of the licenses, including non-payment of royalties,
lack of certified statements, or late payments, after 30 days. Furthermore, a material breach of
the license agreement can terminate a license or create a right of recapture. Spotify did not cure
its failure to comply with any Section 115 license it may have initially obtained within 30 days
of the aforementioned letters. Therefore, as provided in SGA and Plaintiffs letters to Spotify,
any compulsory or other license Spotify may have initially obtained was terminated.
80. All of the foregoing was sufficient to terminate any compulsory license with SGA
and Plaintiffs or any co-owner. Spotify has been, and continues to be, willfully infringing the
Exhibit A musical compositions involved in this action since termination, and, as discussed
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and C hereto without a license since inception. Accordingly, Spotifys continued exploitation of
the Exhibit A musical compositions have been actionable as acts of willful infringement under
Sections 501 of the United States Copyright Act and fully subject to the remedies provided by
81. Under either scenario, whether because Spotify never licensed the compositions,
or because any such licenses have been terminated, Spotify has continued to exploit
compositions, including the Infringed Works, without a license to do so and has therefore
82. Spotifys public defense to its wrongdoing has been to claim that the data is
simply not available for it to track the compositions and the sound recordings that embody them
on its service in order to prevent wholesale copyright infringement. Yet, as the foregoing
83. Prior to filing suit, SGA and Plaintiffs, upon further review of its catalog,
confirmed that at least 15 of the compositions that they own and/or administer, listed on Exhibit
B, had at least one sound recording (and that sound recordings associated ISRC) that embodied
the composition that were reproduced and/or distributed on Spotifys interactive streaming
service. A single composition could have many sound recordings, as many other artists could
record the same song. For the 15 Exhibit B musical compositions, whether it was true that a
single sound recording of the song was available on Spotify or many sound recordings of the
composition were available on Spotify, there was no royalty payment at all made to SGA or
Plaintiffs. Upon information and belief, for at least those compositions that Spotify never paid
royalties on at all, Spotify never, at any time, had a license. Further, upon information and belief,
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Plaintiffs previously cross-referenced against statements received by Spotify based on the name
of the musical composition and name of the music publisher and found no payment) have been
reproduced and/or distribute on Spotifys interactive streaming service without payment and/or,
84. Spotifys business practices are reminiscent of the primitive illegal file sharing
companies. This is shocking considering the record companies that once made headlines for
vigorously pursuing claims against Napster, children, grandparents, and others, are the same
companies that have invested in Spotify with a knowledge of Spotifys lack of systems necessary
to properly license and properly pay for the use of music. However, the fact that the major music
companies collectively stand to make billions of dollars with Spotifys initial public offering
licenses necessary to legally reproduce and distribute the music, Spotify has been and is willfully
infringing upon Plaintiffs copyrights, as well as the copyrights of music publishers that are not
party to this litigation. As Spotify itself has admitted, being the market leader in number of
compositions available through its interactive streaming service is important for Spotify to be
competitive, and each of the Infringed Works have a direct impact on Spotifys market value,
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COUNT I
86. Plaintiffs repeat and re-allege each of the foregoing paragraphs, as though fully set
forth herein.
87. Under 106 of the Copyright Act, the copyright owner of a musical composition
has the exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute the compositions in phonorecords. 17 U.S.C.
106(1) and (3). This includes the exclusive rights to make or authorize DPDs, interactive streams,
online digital music services. See 17 U.S.C. 115(d), 37 C.F.R. 385.10, 385.11.
88. Upon information and belief, the musical compositions owned by Plaintiffs have
been reproduced and/or distributed by Spotify through its interactive streaming service (including
interactive streaming and temporary downloads), and Spotify has also made server copies thereof
during the last three years, all without the required licenses.
89. Spotify has thus made unauthorized reproductions and engaged in unauthorized
90. Spotify has violated many of the exclusive rights enumerated under Section 106 of
the United States Copyright Act by its activities discussed above. Among other things, each
interactive stream and/or temporary download of the Infringed Works reproduced by Spotify
and/or distributed to end-users constitutes a separate and distinct act of infringement, for which
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92. The infringement by Spotify has been, and continues to be, willful and knowing.
93. Pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 504(b), Plaintiffs are entitled to actual damages, including
94. In the alternative, pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 504(c), Plaintiffs are entitled to receive
the maximum amount of statutory damages for willful copyright infringement, $150,000.00 per
composition, for each of the 232 musical compositions identified in Exhibit A hereto.
95. Plaintiffs are entitled to their costs, including reasonable attorneys fees, pursuant to
17 U.S.C. 505.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs pray for judgment against Defendant and for the following relief:
C. A declaration that Plaintiffs are entitled to receive all revenue associated with all
exploitations of the Infringed Works, commencing from the date of judgment and for all amounts
inclusive of the injury to the market value of Plaintiffs copyrights in the Infringed Works, and the
profits of Defendant as will be proven at trial, including a finding that Defendant and other entities
under the Spotify umbrella are practical partners of each other and thus jointly and severally
liable for the profits of each other, or, in the alternative, the maximum amount of statutory
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E. An award of attorneys' fees and full costs pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 505 and under
G. For such other and further relief as this Court may deem just and proper.
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 38(b), and otherwise, Plaintiffs respectfully
By: ---'"-'---'-----'----'---
Richard S. Busch (TN Bar# 14594)
KING & BALLOW
315 Union Street, Suite 1100
Nashville, TN 37201
Telephone: (615) 726-5422
Facsimile: (615) 726-5417
rbusch(c_ilkingballow .com
Attorney for Plaintiffs
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