A regular on the legal circuit late, will see its court-related entanglements extend into 2018 as Wixen Music Publishing served the streaming giant with a $1.6-billion-dollar lawsuit. Notable for its licensure music produced by more than 200 artists, including , , Stevie Nicks and more, Wixen alleges that Spotify does not possess the proper licenses to use “thousands” songs that are made available on the streaming platform, a reiteration the central claim previously made by David Lowery and Melissa Ferrick in their copyright infringement suits against Spotify.
Wixen has opened the case on the grounds that the proposed by Spotify in response to Lowery and Ferrick’s class action lawsuit “does not adequately compensate Wixen or the songwriters it represents.” Wixen founder Randall Wixen relays that he does not view the lawsuit as the legal pursuit a pot gold, but as a justified response to the settlement: “We’re just asking to be treated fairly,” Wixen states, “We are not looking for a ridiculous punitive payment. But we estimate that our clients account for somewhere between 1% and 5% the music these services distribute. Spotify has more than $3 billion in annual revenue and pays outrageous annual salaries to its executives and millions per month for ultra-luxurious fice space in various cities. All we’re asking for is for them to reasonably compensate our clients by sharing a miniscule amount the revenue they take in with the creators the product they sell.”
Wixen additionally alleges that Spotify “made insufficient efforts” to secure the correct licenses, citing said “insufficient effort” as the consequence Spotify’s desire to be “first to market” in the context the music streaming market. Spotify’s suggested failure to acquire such licenses led the company to violate the requirements Section 115 the Copyright Act, according to Wixen.
Spotify responded to Wixen’s lawsuit on the same day, filing court papers that countered that Wixen’s clients had not received an adequate amount time in which to withdraw their names from the legal action, Wixen supposedly giving its clients only a brief op-out period.
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