Viral DRM Awarded Damages for Its 512(f) Claims, But At What Cost?

Technology & Marketing Law Blog 2025-04-08

Viral DRM is a copyright enforcement agency focused on extreme weather videos. The first time I blogged about them, they brought a SAD Scheme suit that initially resulted in an ex parte TRO. However, the case fell apart on further proceedings when the court reconsidered jurisdiction and joinder. It’s so typical that SAD Scheme cases can’t survive actual scrutiny, unlike the deferential reviews courts apply at the ex parte TRO stage. The second time I blogged about them, their case fell apart because their purported exclusive enforcement rights weren’t sufficient to confer copyright standing.

On March 13, a district court issued 8 default judgment rulings in favor of Viral DRM. (The court may have issued more opinions than these 8; these are just the ones that hit my alerts). I didn’t take the time to trace if any of these 8 are the detritus of the cases I previously blogged about.

Based on the prior ruling about Viral DRM’s lack of copyright standing, the court rejects Viral DRM’s standing to enforce copyrights of the third-party content creators it claims to represent. The court also rejects Viral DRM’s standing to bring a 1202 CMI claim because the contract trail was too confusing for the court. The court shuts the door on Viral DRM’s further efforts to show it had standing:

Viral DRM has previously been granted leave to amend and has been afforded several opportunities to clarify its claims and the evidence in support of its claims. Each successive filing raises more questions than it answers. It is impossible to tell whether this is sloppiness or something nefarious, but the Court has expended tremendous resources trying to figure it out and has given Viral DRM chance after chance to clarify the record, but each response only muddies the record.

Sloppy or nefarious…porque no los dos?

The court does award damages for the 512(f) claims in some of the cases based on the defendants’ counternotifications. This produces a relatively rare plaintiff win under 512(f), where plaintiff wins usually occur only when the defendants no-show.

But…DRM’s “win” is not much of a win. Viral DRM requested damages between $2,500 and $12,500 for each 512(f) case, but the court says Viral DRM failed to provide the requisite support to compute those damages:

Viral DRM has failed to show it suffered any harm “as a result of” Defendant’s false counternotifications. Upon receipt of the DMCA takedown notice, YouTube took down the videos. There is no evidence YouTube put the videos back up upon receipt of the counternotifications, and the communication from YouTube indicates it would not do so provided Viral DRM took “legal action against the uploader”

Viral DRM pointed to the costs of preparing the takedown notices, but the court discounts those because those costs weren’t incurred in response to the allegedly bogus counternotifications. Instead, the court awards nominal damages of $1 per “bogus” counternotice—across the 8 lawsuits, this comes to $16 TOTAL. Viral DRM also gets post-judgment interest, so this should add a couple more cents to the total damages award.

I’m no math expert, but I’m pretty sure Viral DRM did not come out as an economic winner from these lawsuits. Across the eight lawsuits, it netted a total damages award that might be enough to buy a couple of Happy Meals. This does not sound like a route to profitability. Maybe Viral DRM can make it up in volume.

Case Citations:

Viral DRM LLC v. Ashgar, 2025 WL 822685 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025) Viral DRM LLC v. Fadila, 2025 WL 822688 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025) Viral DRM LLC v. Fuentes, 2025 WL 822690 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025) Viral DRM LLC v. Lepetyuk, 2025 WL 822981 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025) Viral DRM LLC v. Lietucheva, 2025 WL 822689 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025) Viral DRM LLC v. Margarita, 2025 WL 822980 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025) Viral DRM LLC v. Navez, 2025 WL 834498 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025) Viral DRM LLC v. Shubstorsky, 2025 WL 822691 (N.D. Cal. March 13, 2025)

BONUS 1: Imposter Pastor Movie LLC v. Oliver, 2025 WL 819117 (E.D.N.C. March 14, 2025). Another plaintiff wins a default judgment for 512(f) violations. “[W]hen a plaintiff plausibly alleges that no reasonable copyright holder could have believed that material infringed a copyright, it is permissible to infer that the copyright holder did not subjectively believe the allegation of infringement in a DMCA takedown request.” Using a reasonable copyright owner’s perspectives is the opposite of proving the defendant’s subjective beliefs as required by the Rossi case, but plaintiffs can get away with this scienter bastardization on a default judgment.

The court also awards a default judgment for tortious interference based on bogus takedown notices, despite the many cases holding that 512(f) preempts state law equivalents (including the Hyphy case below). Again, plaintiffs can get away with this on a default judgment. The court awards the plaintiff $12k in damages and $34k in attorneys’ fees.

BONUS 2: Hyphy Music, Inc. v. Sena, 2025 WL 842893 (E.D. Cal. March 18, 2025). This is a copyright ownership dispute that spilled over to Spotify, who received takedown notices. That prompted the plaintiff’s claim for tortious interference, which the court says is preempted by 512(f): “Courts in the Ninth Circuit have held that 17 U.S.C. § 512(f) of the DMCA preempts state law claims based on DMCA takedown notifications because the rights asserted under state law are wholly encompassed by the Copyright Act.” Not a new legal standard, but it chafes me each time I see it.

Prior Posts on Section 512(f)

* Big YouTube Channel Gets TRO Against Being Targeted by DMCA Copyright Takedown Notices–Invisible Narratives v. Next Level Apps * The Competition Between Temu and Shein Moves Into a Courtroom–Whaleco v. SheinCopyright Battles Over City Council VideosRecord Label Sends Bogus Takedown Notice, Defeats 512(f) Claim Anyway–White v. UMGPlaintiffs Make Some Progress in 512(f) Cases512(f) Doesn’t Restrict Competitive Gaming of Search Results–Source Capital v. Barrett Financial512(f) Once Again Ensnared in an Employment Ownership Dispute–Shande v. ZooxSurprise! Another 512(f) Claim Fails–Bored Ape Yacht Club v. RippsYou’re a Fool if You Think You Can Win a 512(f) Case–Security Police and Fire Professionals v. Maritas512(f) Plaintiff Must Pay $91k to the Defense–Digital Marketing v. McCandlessAnti-Circumvention Takedowns Aren’t Covered by 512(f)–Yout v. RIAA11th Circuit UPHOLDS a 512(f) Plaintiff Win on Appeal–Alper Automotive v. Day to Day ImportsCourt Mistakenly Thinks Copyright Owners Have a Duty to Police Infringement–Sunny Factory v. ChenAnother 512(f) Claim Fails–Moonbug v. BabybusA 512(f) Plaintiff Wins at Trial! 👀–Alper Automotive v. Day to Day ImportsSatirical Depiction in YouTube Video Gets Rough Treatment in Court512(f) Preempts Tortious Interference Claim–Copy Me That v. This Old Gal512(f) Claim Against Robo-Notice Sender Can Proceed–Enttech v. OkularityCopyright Plaintiffs Can’t Figure Out What Copyrights They Own, Court Says ¯\_(ツ)_/¯A 512(f) Case Leads to a Rare Damages Award (on a Default Judgment)–California Beach v. Du512(f) Claim Survives Motion to Dismiss–Brandyn Love v. Nuclear Blast America512(f) Claim Fails in the 11th Circuit–Johnson v. New Destiny Christian CenterCourt Orders Rightsowner to Withdraw DMCA Takedown Notices Sent to Amazon–Beyond Blond v. HeldmanAnother 512(f) Claim Fails–Ningbo Mizhihe v DoeVideo Excerpts Qualify as Fair Use (and Another 512(f) Claim Fails)–Hughes v. BenjaminHow Have Section 512(f) Cases Fared Since 2017? (Spoiler: Not Well)Another Section 512(f) Case Fails–ISE v. LongarzoAnother 512(f) Case Fails–Handshoe v. Perret * A DMCA Section 512(f) Case Survives Dismissal–ISE v. LongarzoDMCA’s Unhelpful 512(f) Preempts Helpful State Law Claims–Stevens v. Vodka and MilkSection 512(f) Complaint Survives Motion to Dismiss–Johnson v. New Destiny Church‘Reaction’ Video Protected By Fair Use–Hosseinzadeh v. Klein9th Circuit Sides With Fair Use in Dancing Baby Takedown Case–Lenz v. UniversalTwo 512(f) Rulings Where The Litigants Dispute Copyright OwnershipIt Takes a Default Judgment to Win a 17 USC 512(f) Case–Automattic v. SteinerVague Takedown Notice Targeting Facebook Page Results in Possible Liability–CrossFit v. AlviesAnother 512(f) Claim Fails–Tuteur v. Crosley-Corcoran17 USC 512(f) Is Dead–Lenz v. Universal Music512(f) Plaintiff Can’t Get Discovery to Back Up His Allegations of Bogus Takedowns–Ouellette v. ViacomUpdates on Transborder Copyright Enforcement Over “Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer”–Shropshire v. Canning17 USC 512(f) Preempts State Law Claims Over Bogus Copyright Takedown Notices–Amaretto v. Ozimals17 USC 512(f) Claim Against “Twilight” Studio Survives Motion to Dismiss–Smith v. Summit EntertainmentCease & Desist Letter to iTunes Isn’t Covered by 17 USC 512(f)–Red Rock v. UMGCopyright Takedown Notice Isn’t Actionable Unless There’s an Actual Takedown–Amaretto v. OzimalsSecond Life Ordered to Stop Honoring a Copyright Owner’s Takedown Notices–Amaretto Ranch Breedables v. OzimalsAnother Copyright Owner Sent a Defective Takedown Notice and Faced 512(f) Liability–Rosen v. HSIFurniture Retailer Enjoined from Sending eBay VeRO Notices–Design Furnishings v. Zen PathDisclosure of the Substance of Privileged Communications via Email, Blog, and Chat Results in Waiver — Lenz v. UniversalYouTube Uploader Can’t Sue Sender of Mistaken Takedown Notice–Cabell v. ZimmermanRare Ruling on Damages for Sending Bogus Copyright Takedown Notice–Lenz v. Universal512(f) Claim Dismissed on Jurisdictional Grounds–Project DoD v. FedericiBiosafe-One v. Hawks DismissedMichael Savage Takedown Letter Might Violate 512(f)–Brave New Media v. WeinerFair Use – It’s the Law (for what it’s worth)–Lenz v. UniversalCopyright Owner Enjoined from Sending DMCA Takedown Notices–Biosafe-One v. HawksNew(ish) Report on 512 Takedown NoticesCan 512(f) Support an Injunction? Novotny v. ChapmanAllegedly Wrong VeRO Notice of Claimed Infringement Not Actionable–Dudnikov v. MGA Entertainment

The post Viral DRM Awarded Damages for Its 512(f) Claims, But At What Cost? appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog.