Internet Archive Faces Copyright Lawsuit over 'Myspace Dragon Hoard'
4 days ago
- #Digital Preservation
- #Internet Archive
- #Copyright Infringement
- The Internet Archive (IA) preserves digital history, including web pages via the Wayback Machine and unique projects like Myspace content.
- In 2019, Myspace lost 50 million songs from 14 million artists due to a server migration failure.
- An anonymous academic group provided IA with 490,000 Myspace songs (2008-2010), later dubbed the 'Myspace Dragon Hoard'.
- The collection was uploaded to archive.org for free streaming and downloading, alongside a companion site, lostmyspace.com.
- Musician Anthony Martino sued IA in 2023, alleging copyright infringement over his songs in the Dragon Hoard and digitized CD materials.
- Martino seeks up to $8.85M in damages, while IA argues for minimal damages, citing innocent infringement and DMCA safe harbor protections.
- IA denies direct involvement in uploading the collection, attributing it to anonymous researchers, and disputes Martino's revocable license claims.
- The case is set for trial, with discovery ongoing and a tentative trial date in April 2027.
- IA previously settled a lawsuit with major music labels over digitizing gramophones.