The iconic hip-hop mixtape website, Spinrilla, has shut down after a judge ordered the company to pay $50 million in piracy damages and other fees. Universal Music, Warner Music, and Sony Music, as well as other major record labels, filed the complaint against the website in documents obtained by Billboard. The order names Spinrilla founder Jeffrey Dylan Copeland.
“Through the Spinrilla website and apps, users with an artist account can upload content that any other user can then download or stream on demand for free, an unlimited number of times,” the RIAA’s lawyer James Lamberth writes in the complaint. “A substantial amount of content uploaded to the Spinrilla website and apps consists of popular sound recordings whose copyrights are owned by Plaintiffs.”
UMG Files Complaint Against Spinrilla
The RIAA itself also issued a statement regarding Spinrilla. “Spinrilla specializes in ripping off music creators by offering thousands of unlicensed sound recordings for free,” the company said. “Fans today have access to millions upon millions of songs from innovative platforms and services that pay creators — this kind of illicit activity has no place in today’s music marketplace.”
The complaint further accuses Spinrilla of having “knowingly contributed to, profited from, and induced, the widespread infringement of Plaintiffs’ sound recording copyrights through the Spinrilla website and apps.” The settlement additionally states that Copeland must pay “$50,000,000, inclusive of any recoverable costs and attorneys’ fees.” He has five days to shut down his site. He’ll have to transfer the website domain registration to the property of the record companies, although they can’t use it.
Fans on Twitter were sad to see the iconic mixtape website meet its end. “Spinrilla got me thru highschool,” one fan wrote. Another tweeted, “Damn RIP Spinrilla [heartbreak emoji]. You made my early years in college lit.” Spinrilla isn’t the only mixtape website that has been experiencing business troubles. There were also rumors that Datpiff was also shutting down this year, but the company later clarified they were only making changes to their website.
[Via]