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Sony, Universal Music Among Publishers Sued By Elon Musk's X. Here's Why

The lawsuit alleges that publishers representing more than 90% of US copyrighted music joined forces through the National Music Publishers' Association in conspiring against X.

Sony, Universal Music Among Publishers Sued By Elon Musk's X. Here's Why
X said the publishers have flooded the platform with weekly takedown notices.
  • Elon Musk's X Corp sued 18 major music publishers for antitrust violations in Texas court
  • The lawsuit accuses publishers of blocking competition and inflating music license rates for X
  • Publishers allegedly used takedown notices to pressure X into accepting industrywide licensing
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Washington:

Elon Musk's X Corp sued 18 major music publishers and a leading US music industry trade association on Friday, alleging they conspired to block competition and force the social media platform to purchase licenses for musical works at inflated rates.

The lawsuit, filed in federal district court in Texas, accused the National Music Publishers' Association, Sony Music, Universal Music, Warner Chappell and other music publishers of violating federal antitrust law by refusing to negotiate individual licensing deals with X.

"X has been denied the ability to acquire a U.S. musical-composition license from any individual music publisher on competitive terms," the lawsuit said.

The National Music Publishers' Association, Sony Music, Universal Music and Warner Chappell did not immediately respond to requests for comment. X did not immediately respond to a similar request.

The lawsuit alleges that publishers representing more than 90% of US copyrighted music joined forces through the National Music Publishers' Association in conspiring against X.

X said the publishers have flooded the platform with weekly takedown notices targeting thousands of posts containing copyrighted music - including content from high-profile accounts - to pressure the platform into accepting industrywide licensing terms.

The complaint said X has removed thousands of posts and suspended more than 50,000 users, harming its user base and advertising revenue. It asked the court to restore competitive conditions in music licensing and compensate X for lost advertising revenue.

In 2024, X won dismissal of most of a lawsuit filed in 2023 by 17 music publishers, including Sony and Universal, that accused it of infringing copyrights on nearly 1,700 songs by letting people post music online without permission. The publishers sought more than $250 million in damages.

X said in Friday's lawsuit that some of the publishers who sued have been willing to negotiate a settlement on individual terms.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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