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Taylor Swift can’t shake off copyright lawsuit

By Edvard Pettersson, Bloomberg News
Published: October 31, 2019, 6:04am

LOS ANGELES — Taylor Swift won’t escape so easily after all from allegations that her 2014 hit “Shake It Off” illegally copied the lyrics of “Playas Gon’ Play.”

The U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco on Monday overturned a judge’s ruling throwing out the copyright infringement lawsuit by the two songwriters of the 2001 track by female group 3LW.

The appeals court disagreed with the judge’s conclusion that the lyrics of the 2001 song — “playas, they gonna play, and haters, they gonna hate” — weren’t original enough to be entitled copyright protection.

It wasn’t for the judge to decide the “worth of an expressive work,” the appellate court said, citing a 1903 U.S. Supreme Court decision that cautioned those trained only in the law against making themselves final judges of creative works. The decision is a setback for artists who are trying to turn the tide of copyright lawsuits over musical phrases that they argue aren’t protected.

The same appellate court is weighing for the second time whether Led Zeppelin stole the opening chords of “Stairway to Heaven” from a 1968 instrumental track by a California band. A three-judge panel last year threw out a jury verdict favoring Led Zeppelin.

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