Supreme Court applies Cox ruling to remand Grande Communications piracy case

In a follow-up to its landmark Cox decision, the US Supreme Court has vacated a lower court ruling holding internet service provider Grande Communications liable for subscribers' copyright infringement and remanded it for reconsideration. The order, issued Monday, reinforces that ISPs face contributory liability only if they intend infringement, potentially benefiting other providers like Verizon.

This is part of the ongoing series on Supreme Court rulings limiting ISP liability for copyright infringement. The Supreme Court issued a brief order vacating the US Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit's October 2024 decision against Grande Communications. The 5th Circuit had found Grande contributorily liable, deeming it knew or was willfully blind to subscribers' piracy yet continued services, leading to a $46.8 million damages verdict (remanded for retrial). The case returns to the lower court in light of the Supreme Court's recent unanimous March 2026 decision in Cox Communications, Inc. v. Sony Music Entertainment. There, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that service providers are liable only if they intend infringement—such as by inducing it or offering services tailored to it without substantial noninfringing uses. Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson concurred in the judgment but critiqued parts of the reasoning. In Cox, music labels sought $1 billion from Cox for failing to act on infringement notices; the ruling overturned liability. Music labels including Sony, Universal, and Warner had accused Grande of similar contributory infringement. The development could aid other ISPs like Verizon facing parallel suits. Law professor Eric Goldman (Santa Clara University) noted the Cox decision disrupted precedent, urging copyright owners to moderate demands on ISPs. Gamma Law's David B. Hoppe emphasized protections for passive ISPs, unlike active facilitators.

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Supreme Court to weigh Cox’s liability for users’ copyright infringement

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The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear Cox Communications, Inc. v. Sony Music Entertainment on December 1, 2025, a case that asks when internet service providers can be held contributorily liable for failing to curb repeat copyright infringement by their subscribers.

The US Supreme Court ruled unanimously on March 25 that internet service providers like Cox Communications are not liable for their subscribers' copyright infringement. The decision, written by Justice Clarence Thomas, reversed a lower court finding against Cox in a long-running dispute with Sony Music Entertainment. The ruling draws on precedents from the 1984 Betamax case and 2005 Grokster decision.

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Das Unternehmen X von Elon Musk hat sich auf eine aktuelle Entscheidung des U.S. Supreme Court berufen, um eine Abweisung der Urheberrechtsklagen von Musikverlagen gegen die Plattform zu erreichen. X macht geltend, dass das Urteil die in der Klage angeführte Theorie der mittelbaren Haftung (contributory liability) zurückweise. Die Verlage widersprechen dieser Ansicht, stimmten jedoch einer Aussetzung des Beweisaufnahmeverfahrens zu, während die Rechtsfrage schriftlich erörtert wird.

U.S. senators have unveiled a bipartisan discussion draft aimed at stopping websites that illegally stream sports, empowering copyright holders to seek federal court orders blocking foreign piracy sites. The push comes as some fans say rising subscription costs are driving them to illicit streams.

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Italy’s communications regulator has classified content delivery networks as electronic communications networks subject to general authorization — a step critics say could enable paid interconnection disputes even as the EU has said it won’t impose network usage fees. The move lands as Donald Trump has publicly praised Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on Truth Social.

Republican senators pressed lawyers for Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile at a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing Tuesday over the companies’ handling of subpoenas from special counsel Jack Smith’s office seeking phone toll records connected to congressional Republicans during the Justice Department’s 2020 election interference investigation.

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Kenias Berufungsgericht hat entschieden, dass bestimmte Abschnitte des Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act von 2018 verfassungswidrig sind. Die Entscheidung erging in einem Verfahren der Bloggers Association of Kenya (BAKE). Diese Bestimmungen wurden von der Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) genutzt, um Kritiker und Blogger festzunehmen, die beschuldigt wurden, falsche Informationen zu verbreiten.

 

 

 

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