Appeals Court Tells Universal Music: You Lost The Veoh Case, Get Over It

from the moving-on... dept

The Universal Music case against Veoh is quite incredible on many layers. Universal Music sued Veoh, a YouTube-like company, despite the fact that Veoh was quite careful in abiding by the DMCA’s safe harbor rules. Universal Music has lost at every single level, though the costs of the lawsuit put Veoh out of business (someone else bought up the domain and continues to run a site, but it’s not the original Veoh). Despite losing, and losing badly, Universal Music keeps pumping huge sums of money into the law firms it hired to continually appeal the rulings against it, despite them being overwhelmingly against Universal Music. Back in March, the appeals court, once again sided with Veoh, but Universal Music asked for the court to rehear the case.

The Ninth Circuit appeals court has made it clear it has no interest in rehearing the case:

The panel has voted to deny Appellant’s petition for rehearing. Judges Pregerson and Berzon have voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc and Judge Fisher so recommends.

The full court has been advised of the petition for rehearing en banc and no judge has requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc.

Basically, not a single judge on the court thinks there’s any issue here at all. Universal Music lost. It lost big. It lost clearly and with little question to whether or not it should have lost. Not a single judge on the court thought that it’s even worth bothering exploring this issue again since the issues and the decision were so clear.

Of course, given that Universal Music’s lawyers seem to be running the show, I fully expect them to ask the Supreme Court to review the case as well (rack up those billing hours!). Chances are the Supreme Court will deny cert (what’s the issue to review here?), but if they actually take the case, it could lead to a clear decision on how Universal Music’s warped interpretation of the DMCA, that it requires filters, is obviously incorrect.

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Companies: universal music, veoh

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Comments on “Appeals Court Tells Universal Music: You Lost The Veoh Case, Get Over It”

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22 Comments
That One Guy (profile) says:

I’m actually rather hoping this does end up being ruled on by the Supreme Court, as I’d love to see UM try and find some ‘higher court'(a petition to the white house maybe?) when they get squashed again.

Also, and I’m sure this has been brought up before, but I find it important enough to ask again: given the fact that UM’s lawsuits were obviously to a) put Veoh out of business due to legal fees, and b) to set a precedent for later cases beneficial to UM, why has UM not been ordered to pay Veoh’s legal fees? This is pretty much a textbook example of ‘vexatious litigation’, so why hasn’t UM been ordered to pay the legal fees of their target as punishment?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Universal didnt lose

That was supposed to be the cherry on the top, and like you said a feature not the main feature they were looking for though.

They wanted the power to force filtering and probably be able to chose what filtering was adequate or not, the courts disagreed hard on that.

And the shill here who parroted that line may be feeling a bit stupid right about now LoL

CK20XX (profile) says:

Re: Universal didnt lose

The funny thing is, Universal seems to be so wrapped-up in this case that they don’t even seem to realize that they won by losing. Most businesses are short-term thinkers like that, unable to realize how they sabotage their own futures with their practices, but Universal’s logic is shorter than an ant’s leg here. When you put your profits before your customers, in time you will have neither.

Anonymous Coward says:

although it is extremely important that UM has lost the case, the fact is they won anyway. Veoh ceases to be and as far as UM is concerned, that is the thing they wanted most. what the court should do is give Veoh all expenses and sufficient funds from UM so the service can get up and running again, then make it clear that they are doing everything in a legal manner and cannot be sued anymore! i mean, what is the point of winning if you have had to stop trading anyway? all that means is you have cleared the way for another, well-funded group to come along and start up on the back of your trial

Tim Griffiths (profile) says:

A perfect example of...

This just strikes me as a huge case of gamblers fallacy. They took a risk on the case hoping that it would pay off and each time it hasn’t they’ve looked at the time and money and thought “well a bit more and surely we’ll get what we want and it will all be worth it”. They are going to play this through to the end because if they simply cut their losses now they’ll have to admit to themselves it’s what they should have done in the first place and heads will roll. So those self same heads will justify anything if they can convince themselves theirs hope.

Ninja (profile) says:

As it was well pointed UM didn’t lose this battle. They brought their opponent to the ground. However I see this casualty as a necessity to establish a solid precedent as it was also pointed by the first commenter.

I am wary of how things will develop though. Without some serious competition maybe due to the chilling effects from this lawsuit and the one from Viacom against Youtube this same Youtube managed to get firmly established as THE platform for hosting and streaming user generated videos. Which poses the same issue of Amazon monopolizing the ebook market, Apple the digital mp3 songs. They simply dictate what happens in the market and in Youtube’s case you have those problematic Content ID takedowns and arbitrary censorship (usually due to moral standings). A more diversified market would be preferable.

That said, the MAFIAA are the biggest losers in any of the cases due to their own incompetency.

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