Cox Communications Challenges DMCA Subpoenas in Federal Appeals Court—What It Means for Copyright Defense
Cox Communications Challenges DMCA Subpoenas in Federal Appeals Court—What It Means for Copyright Defense
A major legal battle over DMCA subpoenas is unfolding in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, with Cox Communications pushing back against efforts to force ISPs to reveal subscriber identities in copyright infringement cases. This case has broad implications for internet users, copyright enforcement tactics, and BitTorrent defense strategies—making it highly relevant to our work at Antonelli Law.
Background: The DMCA Subpoena Controversy
Hawaii-based attorney Kerry Culpepper has been filing special DMCA subpoenas in federal courts, circumventing the judicial scrutiny typically required in copyright infringement lawsuits. These subpoenas demand that ISPs disclose subscriber identities linked to alleged piracy, without the need to file a full federal copyright case.
Cox Communications argues that this tactic abuses the DMCA subpoena process, which was never intended to be used against ISPs that merely transmit data rather than host infringing content. The case is now in the Ninth Circuit, which oversees California, Hawaii, and several other states.
EFF Joins the Fight Against Abusive DMCA Subpoenas
After the case was covered by TorrentFreak, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) stepped in, filing an amicus brief in support of Cox. The EFF argues that these subpoenas violate user privacy and could set a dangerous precedent for mass copyright enforcement efforts.
The Reddit Case: A Related Battle Over User Privacy
Culpepper’s copyright enforcement efforts have also extended to Reddit, where she represented Voltage Holdings, Screen Media Ventures, Laundry Films, Killing Link Distribution, and Family of the Year Productions in a similar case. Movie companies issued DMCA subpoenas to Reddit, demanding IP addresses of users who discussed piracy. These users allegedly admitted to using Frontier Communications for unauthorized streaming or downloading, but no direct evidence of infringement was provided. This case highlights the broader implications of copyright enforcement through aggressive subpoena tactics.
How Antonelli Law Can Help
At Antonelli Law, we specialize in BitTorrent copyright defense and have extensive experience fighting ISP subpoenas and mass copyright lawsuits. Cases like this reinforce the need for strong legal advocacy to protect individuals from overly broad, privacy-invasive enforcement tactics.