Knowledge of Infringement Is Not Enough: Contributory Copyright Liability Requires Inducement or an Infringement-Tailored Service
1) Introduction
Cox Communications, Inc. (an Internet service provider serving roughly six million subscribers) was sued by Sony Music Entertainment and other major music copyright owners. Rather than primarily pursuing individual peer-to-peer infringers, respondents sought to impose secondary copyright liability on Cox for continuing to provide Internet access to subscriber accounts after Cox received large volumes of infringement notices (163,148 over about two years) generated by MarkMonitor’s IP-address tracking system.
The core legal question was whether an ISP becomes contributorily liable under the Copyright Act for user infringement merely by continuing to provide service to “known infringers”—i.e., accounts associated with repeated infringement notices—without proof that the ISP intended infringement.
Procedurally, a jury found Cox liable for both contributory and vicarious infringement and awarded $1 billion in statutory damages; the Fourth Circuit affirmed contributory liability but reversed vicarious liability and ordered a damages reassessment. The Supreme Court granted certiorari only on contributory liability.
2) Summary of the Opinion
Justice Thomas, writing for the Court, reversed the Fourth Circuit and held that a service provider is contributorily liable for user infringement only if it intended the service be used for infringement, and that intent may be shown only in two ways recognized by the Court’s precedents:
- Inducement: the provider actively encourages infringement through specific acts.
- Infringement-tailored service: the service is not capable of “substantial” or “commercially significant” noninfringing uses.
Applying that framework, the Court found Cox neither induced infringement nor provided an infringement-tailored service. Cox “simply provided Internet access,” which has substantial lawful uses, and Sony offered no evidence of express promotion, marketing, or intent to encourage infringement. The Court rejected the Fourth Circuit’s rule that supplying a product with knowledge it will be used to infringe is “sufficient” for contributory infringement.
The Court also rejected Sony’s argument that its interpretation would undermine the DMCA safe harbor. The DMCA does not impose liability; it creates defenses, and failure to qualify for safe harbor does not adversely affect a provider’s defense that its conduct is not infringing. The case was reversed and remanded.
3) Analysis
A. Precedents Cited
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd., 545 U. S. 913 (2005)
Grokster supplies the modern Supreme Court vocabulary for secondary copyright liability, distinguishing “contributory” and “vicarious” liability and, crucially here, identifying inducement as a path to contributory liability. The Court relied on Grokster to describe inducement as active encouragement through specific acts (e.g., marketing a product as an infringement tool). The majority also invoked Grokster to reject liability “merely based on a failure to take affirmative steps to prevent infringement.” (citing 545 U. S., at 939, n. 12)
The Court further used Justice Ginsburg’s concurrence in Grokster—quoted for the “commercially significant noninfringing uses” concept—to support a second intent pathway: where a service is effectively “tailored” to infringement because it is not capable of substantial noninfringing uses.
Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc., 464 U. S. 417 (1984)
Sony is the foundational “substantial noninfringing uses” decision. The Court used Sony in two complementary ways:
- To reaffirm that the Copyright Act “does not expressly render anyone liable for infringement committed by another,” and that secondary liability is a judge-made doctrine constrained by precedent.
- To reaffirm the Sony limit: selling or providing a generally lawful, widely useful technology/service is not contributory infringement even if the provider knows some customers may infringe.
In the Court’s telling, Cox’s Internet access service mirrors the Betamax’s posture in Sony: a general-purpose tool with substantial lawful uses. That analogy drives the conclusion that knowledge plus continued provision does not supply the requisite intent.
Kalem Co. v. Harper Brothers, 222 U. S. 55 (1911)
The Court relied on Kalem Co. for the longstanding proposition that “mere indifferent supposition or knowledge” that a purchaser may use a product unlawfully “is not enough” to impose secondary liability. It also cited Kalem Co. as an example of inducement-like conduct: where the defendant “invoked by advertisement” the infringing use.
Central Bank of Denver, N. A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver, N. A., 511 U. S. 164 (1994)
Central Bank of Denver was used as a statutory-interpretation caution: ordinarily, Congress expressly provides secondary liability when it intends it. The majority used this to justify judicial restraint—being “loath” to expand secondary copyright liability beyond historically recognized forms.
Henry v. A. B. Dick Co., 224 U. S. 1 (1912), overruled on other grounds, Motion Picture Patents Co. v. Universal Film Mfg. Co., 243 U. S. 502 (1917)
These patent-related cases appear as analogical support for intent-based inducement principles in intellectual property: liability follows where a sale is made “with the purpose and intent” to facilitate infringement. Their role is to bolster the Court’s insistence on intent, not mere knowledge.
BMG Rights Mgmt. (US) LLC v. Cox Communications, Inc., 881 F. 3d 293 (CA4 2018)
The Supreme Court treated BMG Rights Mgmt. (US) LLC v. Cox Communications, Inc. as the doctrinal source of the Fourth Circuit’s approach—one the Supreme Court rejected. The Fourth Circuit rule endorsed liability where a provider supplies a product “with knowledge” it will be used to infringe. The Supreme Court framed that as a “new form of contributory liability” inconsistent with Sony, Kalem Co., and Grokster.
Sony BMG Music Entertainment v. Tenenbaum, 660 F. 3d 487 (CA1 2011)
This citation served mostly as factual context: copyright owners can sue individual infringers, but scale makes that approach less effective as a comprehensive enforcement strategy.
Concurrence’s authorities: Gershwin Publishing Corp. v. Columbia Artists Mgmt., Inc., 443 F. 2d 1159 (CA2 1971); Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment, LLC, 576 U. S. 446 (2015); TRW Inc. v. Andrews, 534 U. S. 19 (2001); Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh, 598 U. S. 471 (2023); Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos, 605 U. S. 280 (2025); Nye & Nissen v. United States, 336 U. S. 613 (1949); Rosemond v. United States, 572 U. S. 65 (2014)
Justice Sotomayor’s concurrence (joined by Justice Jackson) is important less for the judgment—she agreed Cox should win on this record—than for the doctrinal warning: the majority, in her view, unnecessarily freezes copyright secondary liability into only two categories and undercuts the DMCA’s incentive structure. She invoked Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh and Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos to argue that common-law aiding-and-abetting principles could theoretically apply in copyright, but would require proof of intent to facilitate wrongdoing—proof she found lacking because IP-address notices do not identify the actual user/principal infringer.
B. Legal Reasoning
1. The Court’s intent-centered limitation
The majority builds a bright-line doctrinal constraint: contributory liability requires intent, and that intent is established only through (i) inducement or (ii) provision of a service tailored to infringement (i.e., lacking substantial lawful uses). The Court treats these as the only routes recognized by its precedents and rejects the Fourth Circuit’s “knowledge + continued supply” standard as an impermissible expansion.
2. Application to Cox
- No inducement: Cox did not promote infringement, did not market its service as infringement-friendly, and (on the Court’s account) took steps that “discouraged” infringement (warnings, suspensions, terminations).
- No tailored service: Internet access is paradigmatically capable of substantial noninfringing uses. Providing “Internet access” is not, without more, a service designed to make infringement easier.
3. DMCA safe harbor as defense, not liability lever
Sony argued that the DMCA’s repeat-infringer termination condition (17 U. S. C. §512(i)(1)(A)) would be toothless if ISPs cannot be held liable for continuing to serve known infringers. The majority answers that the DMCA does not create affirmative ISP liability; it offers defenses from liability, and §512(l) prevents noncompliance with safe harbor from harming the provider’s argument that its conduct is not infringing in the first place.
4. The concurrence’s doctrinal disagreement and factual agreement
Justice Sotomayor agrees Cox is not liable here, but criticizes the majority for (in her view) foreclosing other “fault-based” common-law theories (especially aiding and abetting). She would ask a different question: whether Cox had the requisite intent to help infringement succeed. On this record, she finds no such intent because Cox cannot identify which individual users infringed behind an IP address (households, coffee shops, dorms, regional ISPs).
C. Impact
- Rejection of “knowledge-only” contributory liability for general-purpose services: The decision squarely disapproves a rule under which a provider’s continued service to “known infringers” suffices. Plaintiffs must now focus on proving either affirmative encouragement (inducement) or that the service is effectively “good for nothing else” but infringement.
- Strategic shift in copyright enforcement against intermediaries: Claims against ISPs (and potentially other general-purpose platforms) will more heavily turn on internal documents and outward-facing conduct showing promotion/encouragement, product design choices that facilitate infringement, or business models that operationally depend on infringement in a way akin to Grokster.
- DMCA safe-harbor litigation may change shape: The Court’s reasoning reduces the extent to which plaintiffs can use failure to terminate repeat infringers as a substitute for proving intent. However, the concurrence flags a competing narrative: if other common-law theories remain available, plaintiffs may attempt to plead and prove “aiding and abetting” intent with more granular, user-specific evidence.
- Lower-court recalibration: Circuits applying or flirting with knowledge-based standards (as the Fourth Circuit did via BMG) will need to adjust jury instructions and summary-judgment analyses to align with the Supreme Court’s intent-and-two-pathways rule.
4) Complex Concepts Simplified
- Direct vs. secondary liability: Direct infringers are the users who upload/download unlawfully. Secondary liability is liability for helping or benefiting from someone else’s infringement.
- Contributory liability (as framed by the majority): Liability attaches only when the provider intends its service be used to infringe—shown by inducement or by offering a service so infringement-oriented that it lacks substantial lawful uses.
- Inducement: Active encouragement—advertising infringement, instructing users how to infringe, or otherwise taking specific steps to bring about infringement.
- “Substantial noninfringing uses” / “commercially significant noninfringing uses”: If a product/service has meaningful lawful uses, supplying it generally is not contributory infringement merely because some people misuse it.
- IP address notices and identity limits: An IP address identifies a connection/account, not necessarily the individual user. That gap matters for proving intent under theories like aiding and abetting (as the concurrence explains).
- DMCA safe harbor (17 U. S. C. §512): A statutory shield from certain secondary-liability claims if an ISP meets conditions (including a policy for terminating repeat infringers “in appropriate circumstances”). Under §512(l), failing to qualify does not itself imply infringement.
- Statutory damages and willfulness: Under §504(c)(2), willful infringement can increase statutory damages (up to $150,000 per work). The Supreme Court’s reversal of contributory liability removes the foundation for the massive award as it stood.
5) Conclusion
Cox Communications, Inc. v. Sony Music Entertainment re-centers contributory copyright liability on intent and rejects a knowledge-driven standard for general-purpose service providers. Under the majority’s rule, an ISP does not become a contributory infringer simply by continuing to provide Internet access after receiving infringement notices; plaintiffs must prove either inducement or that the service is tailored to infringement by lacking substantial lawful uses.
The concurrence agrees Cox should prevail on these facts but cautions that the majority unnecessarily constrains the universe of possible secondary-liability theories, suggesting common-law aiding-and-abetting theories may remain conceptually available—though difficult to prove where infringement notices identify connections rather than individual infringers.

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