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Copyright Practice Overview
The firm’s Copyright Practice is led by Bruce G. Joseph, named by Legal Times as one of the DC region's 10 "Leading Intellectual Property Lawyers" in the areas of copyright and trademark. The Copyright Practice has broad experience in copyright and content protection (digital rights management) technology, copyright litigation and music and sound recording licensing.Our lawyers are in regular contact with Congress and the Copyright Office and have been at the center of the major digital technology and copyright policy debates, among other things, playing a leading role in negotiations leading to legislation limiting the liability of Internet service providers in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and expanding the permission for digital distance education in the “TEACH Act.” They also have participated in many of the multi-industry efforts to develop technological approaches to content protection and digital rights management. Our copyright litigation practice is diverse, in part encompassing traditional infringement litigation, in part growing out of our extensive involvement in the digital copyright policy and legislative arena, and in part related to music and sound recording licensing. For example, our litigators successfully represented Sirius Satellite Radio against the recording industry’s efforts to obtain billions of dollars in performance rights fees, secured a $20 million jury verdict for willful infringement in favor of a client newsletter publisher, stopped the recording industry’s misuse of a unique ex parte subpoena process in the DMCA and filed amicus briefs in the Supreme Court’s Grokster case. Copyright Infringement and Related Litigation | Music and Sound Recording Fee Litigation | Copyright and Content Protection Policy | Digital Rights Management | Contact Us Copyright Infringement and Related Litigation
Internet- and technology-related litigation is a specialty of the firm. Our attorneys have extensive experience in technology-based infringement litigation, representing alleged infringers and intermediary technology providers and copyright owners. The Copyright Practice has represented Internet service providers and other Internet companies, newsletter publishers, satellite radio broadcasters, computer software developers, as well as more traditional media, in cases involving digital use and infringement of copyrighted works. Significant cases include:
![]() Music and Sound Recording Fee Litigation
The Copyright Practice is a leader in the representation of user interests in the litigation, arbitration and negotiation of license fees payable for musical work and sound recording public performances to organizations including the American Society of Composers, Authors, & Publishers (ASCAP), Broadcast Music, Incorporated (BMI), SESAC, Inc. and SoundExchange. The firm has represented satellite radio broadcasters, radio broadcasters, wireless carriers, Internet audio and video service providers, among others, in such fora as the Copyright Royalty Board, ASCAP Rate Court and BMI Rate Court. Significant cases include:
![]() Copyright and Content Protection Policy
Wiley Rein’s Copyright Practice has been at the forefront of legislative development in response to the digital environment. The firm has played a central role in recent policy debates and has used that knowledge and experience in a wide range of litigation matters.Wiley Rein has been involved in the major policy debates on a diverse array of copyright and content protection technology issues in the digital environment. For example:
![]() Digital Rights Management
Content Protection Background: The advent of digital media and the Internet have increased the desire of content producers and distributors to find means of protecting their works against unauthorized mass distribution and other forms of infringement beyond the protection provided by copyright law. Content owners have primarily turned to technologies that encrypt the content and carry rules authorizing certain uses. They have also adopted methods of marking unencrypted content to carry similar usage rules. The rules are enforced either by legislation, regulation or complex webs of interrelated licenses. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 added stiff penalties for the circumvention of these technologies. Many of the technologies and applicable rules have been developed in connection with multi-industry fora by groups of companies with names that create a rich alphabet soup (e.g., DVDCCA, CPTWG, DTLA, HDCP). In other cases, individual companies are marketing private solutions. All of these technologies have come to be known by the term "digital rights management," or "DRM." Content creators and content protection technology developers are not the only ones who must understand the new DRM world. Consumer electronics, computer and communications device manufacturers whose devices are designed to handle digital content will find themselves subject to a confusing array of obligations that govern how their devices may operate, how they must be built, what input and output they may use and how that may limit their own intellectual property rights. Legislative and Regulatory Activities: The firm’s involvement with DRM-related issues extends back to 1991 and 1992, when it served as lead counsel to the consumer electronics industry in the negotiations leading to the passage of the Audio Home Recording Act (AHRA). That law included the first copyright-related technology mandate, the Serial Copy Management System. Since the AHRA, Wiley Rein has been at or near the center of every legislative debate involving DRM technology. The firm’s experience includes:
Inter-Industry Activities: The Copy Protection Technical Working Group (CPTWG) was created in 1996 following the demise of the DVRA as a forum for the development of voluntary content protection standards. Wiley Rein attorneys participated in many of the early CPTWG meetings on behalf of a leading trade association. Since then, the firm has been involved in many of the inter-industry activities related to content protection technology. Some of our work includes:
![]() Contact Us
Bruce G. Joseph202.719.7258 | bjoseph@wileyrein.com ![]() |
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