Settlement Finalized, Freelancers Finally Receive $9 Million in Copyright Lawsuit
Settlement Finalized, Freelancers Finally Receive $9 Million in Copyright Lawsuit
Nearly seventeen years after a class action lawsuit was filed on behalf of 3,000 freelance journalists, settlement checks are in the mail. The lawsuit itself claimed “copyright infringement by some of the country's biggest publishers,” but now the writers who endured the lengthy legal process “will start receiving their pieces of a settlement totaling $9 million this week.” In response to the news, James Gleick, the president of the Authors Guild and one of the named plaintiffs in the case, said:“We’ve been at the finish line for this lawsuit for a very long time, and so it is great that it’s finally happening. But it’s also certainly a victory tinged with bitterness because 17 years doesn’t make sense.”Mary Rasenberger also chimed in, saying, “For the Authors Guild, this is our bread and butter — to make sure the authors and journalists get paid. We’re small but we do punch above our weight.”But what happened, exactly? For starters, the lawsuit was filed back in 2001 by the Authors Guild, “the American Society of Journalists and Authors, the National Writers Union and 21 freelance writers named as class representatives” in response to publishers “licensing articles by freelancers to the electronic database Lexis/Nexis and other digital indexers without getting the writers’ approval,” according to the lawsuit. The publishers named in the lawsuit included The New York Times, Dow Jones, Reed Elsevier and Knight Ridder.
Copyright logo; image courtesy of TheDigitalArtist via Pixabay, www.pixabay.com
Sources:
It Took 17 Years: Freelancers Receive $9 Million in Copyright SuitLegal: Writers Will Receive Money From Class Action Suit, 17 Years Later
About Brianna Smith
Brianna Smith is a freelance writer and editor in Southwest Michigan. A graduate of Grand Valley State University, Brianna has a passion for politics, social issues, education, science, and more. When she’s not writing, she enjoys the simple life with her husband, daughter, and son.