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Intellectual Property Experts Discuss Modern Challenges in Music Law

On Nov. 19, 2019, alumni and intellectual property (IP) experts from the discussed the latest in copyright infringement at the Entertainment Law Initiative panel, 鈥淧rotector or Suppressor?鈥 hosted by the Recording Academy and the Fashion, Arts, Media & Entertainment Law Center (FAME). The event was co-sponsored by the Cardozo Entertainment Law Society.
(l-r): Brad Cohen, Carla Miller, Christine Lepera, Melanie Leslie (dean), Christopher Buccafusco, Michael Reinert
Michael Reinert 鈥82C, partner at Fox Rothschild and adjunct professor of IP at Cardozo, moderated the panel, which analyzed several recent lawsuits against musicians, including Led Zeppelin, George Harrison and Katy Perry. Carla Miller, senior vice president of business and legal affairs at Universal Music Group, said the Perry case illustrates how modern times have influenced copyright law. Miller said the 鈥渦biquity of music over the internet鈥 could influence how artists approach the creative process. Reinert agreed that copyright infringement is determined by the breadth of access and exposure. Professor Christopher Buccafusco, director of Cardozo鈥檚 Intellectual Property & Information Law Program, recently wrote an amicus brief for Skidmore v. Led Zeppelin. He was also quoted in Rolling Stone earlier this year regarding the Perry case. At the panel, Buccafusco considered the main question of copyright cases: 鈥淚s it widely available?鈥 He added that the question is 鈥渨hether the plaintiff can motivate an intuition that the defendant copied the song from them.鈥 Buccafusco said 鈥渨orking in a field of creatives鈥 means a lot of songs end up sounding alike. Christine Lepera, partner at Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp agreed: 鈥淛ust because something sounds the same doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 copied.鈥 Brad Cohen 鈥05C, senior vice president and head of litigation at Warner Music Group, considered the approach to evidence in recent copyright cases. Cohen said the Skidmore v. Led Zeppelin jury heard the musicologist鈥檚 sheet music but not the sound recording. Lepera also gave an inside look at the methodology of such cases, noting that attorneys pore over precisely how many streams an artist got on YouTube to build the case for infringement. 鈥淚t was a grain of sand at the beach,鈥 Lepera said. Miller noted the unreliability of streams or views as evidence. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l see the spikes of the views go up as soon as the claim is filed,鈥 Miller said. Reinert re-framed the theme of the event: whether copyright law is a 鈥減rotector or suppressor鈥 and how future music law should eliminate fear for creators. 鈥淣ot every aspect of a musical composition can be considered owned by one person,鈥 Lepera said. 鈥淭here are certain building blocks that have to be available to all creators.鈥 Miller responded: 鈥淚t鈥檚 both. Resist the notion that there needs to be a revolution of copyright. It鈥檚 supposed to incentivize creation. The question we鈥檙e asking is if we鈥檝e become so litigious that we鈥檙e seeing suppression.鈥 The panel was organized by Entertainment Law Society Music Chairs and 2Ls Amanda Inglesh and Jason Charles. Charles reflected on the panel after the event: "The event was a great success. Our all-star panel, hand-picked by Cardozo alumnus and music industry legend Michael Reinert, gave those in attendance a master class in copyright law and music in the modern world.鈥

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