
The John Joseph Moakley United States Courthouse in Boston. Photo Credit:
4300streetcar
The cash-flush defendant just recently reiterated its position in a reply memorandum, after initially moving to nix most of the amended copyright suit in October. Subsequently, Team Justice argued against dismissal earlier in November.
As many know, this is one of several ongoing infringement actions against Suno, which is grappling with complaints from the major labels, a different group of artists, and others yet.
Furthermore, while they’re spearheading distinct cases, each of the stateside plaintiffs is seeking relief for alleged infringement-adjacent misconduct. Most notably: Alleged DMCA violations stemming from Suno’s alleged bypassing of YouTube’s “rolling cipher” to obtain protected music for training.
As a result, Suno maintains that it didn’t violate the DMCA at all when allegedly working around the cipher. And for this straightforward reason, the relevant Justice action claim should be dismissed, per the WavTool owner.
“While YouTube’s rolling cipher presents a barrier to parties seeking to download files containing Plaintiffs’ works (making it a copy control), it does not at all restrict or otherwise control one’s ability to access those works,” Suno’s newest filing reads.
“The rolling cipher is a copy control that restricts downloads but does not control access to the works available on YouTube within the meaning of section 1201,” the text continues. “Because it is not unlawful to circumvent a copy control, Plaintiffs have not stated a claim under section 1201.”
Returning to the amended action for a moment, Justice is specifically accusing the gen AI developer of infringing on “exclusive rights in copyrighted songs…by using them to prepare derivative works.”
But in Suno’s view, the claim fails because the plaintiffs allegedly “failed to identify any Suno-generated output that even arguably resembles their asserted works.”
“Without identifying any works that allegedly infringe their derivative work rights and with no reason why they could not do so, Plaintiffs’ infringement claim cannot move past the pleading stage,” Suno’s reply states.
In short, Suno says the claim (originally pertaining to the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act) “is not pleaded in the” amended action, which purportedly fails to allege that it (Suno) passed off the plaintiff artists’ services as its own. Additionally, the claim is allegedly “preempted by the Copyright Act.”
With that, all eyes are now on the presiding judge’s dismissal motion determination. In other Suno litigation news, the company today moved to toss (or, alternatively, transfer) on jurisdictional grounds the above-highlighted complaint from Attack the Sound and others.