Judge Denies Meta's Dismissal Bid in Epidemic Sound Copyright Lawsuit
A federal judge has denied Meta's motion to dismiss a copyright infringement lawsuit filed by Epidemic Sound, which claims Meta illegally used over 1,800 of its recordings and compositions over five years.
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Epidemic Sound alleges that Meta offered their works through its music library for users to download, stream, and incorporate into video content without proper licensing or authorization. The Stockholm-based company also claims Meta actively hindered their efforts to protect their catalog.
Meta's dismissal motion argued that Epidemic's claims lacked specificity regarding the identity and location of the allegedly infringing content. However, Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley rejected this argument, stating that the complaint provides "fair notice of what the claim is and the grounds upon which it rests."
The court also granted Meta's request for judicial notice of Copyright Office records corresponding to the registration numbers provided in Epidemic's complaint.
Key developments:
- Judge denies Meta's motion to dismiss
- Scheduled hearing canceled
- Case management conference set for January 12th
- Court approves judicial notice of copyright registration records
Neither Meta nor Epidemic Sound has publicly commented on the order. The case will proceed under docket number 3:22-cv-04223.