Amazon, Google should be happy after online music locker ruling

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A federal court ruling in New York could pave the way for Google and Amazon, should they face lawsuits over their decisions not to obtain licenses from record companies before launching their online music lockers.

Ars Technica reported that a judge ruled that MP3tunes, an online music locker, is eligible for a safe harbor in the digital copyright law that protects a company from copyright liability over illegal music uploaded to its service as long as it removes that material when notified. While the judge in the case ruled in favor of EMI, the report says it was a hollow victory at best. Judge William Pauley wrote in court documents that there is “no genuine dispute” about whether or not MP3tunes should be considered under the safe harbor. Public Knowledge’s Sherwin Siy said in a statement that the court rejected a framework EMI put forth that “would have imperiled remote-storage services and other cloud applications. The court’s rejection of these arguments deflates a lot of the legal uncertainty that record labels have tried to inject into these technological developments.”

(Aug 23)


Amazon, Google should be happy after online music locker ruling