(New York) The biggest record labels are claiming hundreds of millions of US dollars in unpaid rights from Twitter, accusing the social network of not having done enough against the improper use of songs on its platform.
“Twitter is the only major social network that has consistently refused to make deals to use millions of songs,” David Israelite, CEO of the Music Publishers Association of America (NMPA), commented in a reaction sent to the AFP.
According to him, the leaders of the blue bird group “know very well that music is posted, launched and listened to by millions of people every day on its platform”.
Publishers denounce Twitter’s slowness to remove musical content published without authorization, delays reaching “often weeks”, “sometimes more”, according to a document filed Wednesday in federal court in Nashville (Tennessee).
At the same time, the company uses this content to attract Internet users and monetizes tweets including music through advertising, argue the houses, including Universal, Sony or Warner.
They are asking the courts to order Twitter to stop these practices and to pay US$150,000 for each piece used without authorization.
Thousands of tweets having been noted by the publishers, the bill could potentially amount to several hundred million dollars.
Twitter no longer has a press service and responded to an AFP request with a turd emoji.
The other major social networks, from Snapchat to YouTube, have all entered into revenue-sharing agreements with music publishers that allow Internet users to use songs in their videos or messages without exposing themselves to having them removed from the considered platform.