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Internet Radio Service Pandora Prevails in License Dispute


An employee works in the lobby of Pandora headquarters in Oakland, Calif., Tuesday, June 14, 2011
An employee works in the lobby of Pandora headquarters in Oakland, Calif., Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Pandora Media Inc has won a Manhattan federal court decision rejecting efforts by some music publishers to narrow a license that enables the largest U.S. Internet radio service to play their music.

U.S. District Judge Denise Cote said an existing antitrust consent decree that requires the American Society of Composers, Authors & Publishers to license its works to Pandora from 2011 to 2015 “unambiguously” covers all of its works, even if publishers seek to “withdraw” authority to license to “new media” services.

“We're obviously gratified by the result,” said Kenneth Steinthal, a partner at King & Spalding in San Francisco who represents Pandora, which is based in nearby Oakland.

The decision could strengthen Pandora's case as it pursues related litigation on what constitutes “reasonable” licensing fees. Cote has scheduled a Dec. 4 trial on that matter.

ASCAP has about 470,000 members, and said it represents music from artists like Leonard Bernstein, Beyonce, Duke Ellington, George Gershwin, Alan Jackson, Jay-Z and Katy Perry.

The case arose after publishers including EMI Music Publishing Ltd, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC and Universal Music Publishing Group withdrew or tried to withdraw new media licensing rights from ASCAP, allowing them to negotiate directly with Internet radio services.

Concerned that it would lose access to some music content for its roughly 72 million active listeners, Pandora in July sought a court ruling that publisher withdrawals would not affect the ASCAP license.

In response, ASCAP argued that Pandora had understood that the consent decree license could be narrowed. Cote, however, rejected its argument.

“ASCAP argues that 'ASCAP repertory' refers only to the rights in music works that ASCAP has been granted by its members as of a particular moment in time,” the judge wrote. “Pandora argues that ‘ASCAP repertory’ is a defined term articulated in terms of ‘works’ or ‘compositions,’ as opposed to in terms of a gerrymandered parcel of ‘rights.’ Pandora is correct.”

Lauren Iossa, an ASCAP spokeswoman, had no immediate comment. A lawyer for ASCAP did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Pandora shares closed up $1.20, or 5 percent, at $25.19 in Tuesday trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Cote issued her decision after U.S. markets closed.
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