Music Industry
Aug 12, 2025
Photo by: Napster
By OohYeah Magazine
Some brands just can’t shake their baggage — and Napster might be the music industry’s most notorious example.
Sony Music Entertainment has filed a lawsuit against Napster, alleging the streaming service owes more than $9.2 million in unpaid royalties and licensing fees while continuing to exploit copyrighted songs without authorization. The music giant is also seeking up to $37.5 million in damages for copyright infringement involving 240 tracks from artists including Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears, and Miley Cyrus.
Filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on August 1, the complaint accuses Napster’s parent companies — Rhapsody International and Infinite Reality — of a year-long pattern of missed payments, even as the platform collected subscription fees from “millions of paying users.” Sony claims Napster’s licenses were formally terminated this summer, yet the service kept streaming its catalog.
“Defendants have continued to reproduce, distribute, publicly perform and otherwise exploit Sony Music Entertainment’s sound recordings on Napster, without any legal right to do so,” Sony’s legal team wrote.
If true, it’s the kind of move that fits a familiar Napster pattern: pushing the boundaries of what’s legal in music distribution until the lawyers come knocking.
To understand why this lawsuit feels like déjà vu, you have to go back to June 1, 1999 — when Napster launched as a peer-to-peer file-sharing service created by Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker. The platform exploded in popularity almost overnight, becoming synonymous with free MP3 swapping and music piracy. Major labels and the RIAA pounced, suing the company into the ground by 2001. Napster filed for bankruptcy the next year.
That should have been the end. Instead, the Napster name has been sold, rebranded, and repackaged over the years — but the reputation for skating the legal line has lingered, regardless of who’s owned it. Even under later “legit” incarnations, Napster has faced accusations of slow or missing royalty payments, questionable reporting, and broken promises to artists and rights holders.
While Shawn Fanning faded from the spotlight, co-founder Sean Parker went on to become one of tech’s most influential behind-the-scenes players. After a stint at Facebook, Parker spotted a new opportunity to “do Napster legally” when he discovered a small Swedish startup called Spotify in 2009.
Parker invested $15 million, joined Spotify’s board, and helped negotiate crucial licensing deals with major labels — including the same industry titans that once sued him. He was also instrumental in Spotify’s 2011 U.S. launch, announcing a high-profile partnership with Facebook that turbocharged its growth.
Critics argue Parker’s influence helped enshrine the current streaming royalty model — one that pays fractions of a cent per play and leaves independent artists struggling to make a living. Ironically, it’s a model now at the center of disputes like Sony’s latest lawsuit against Napster.
In March 2025, Napster was acquired by Infinite Reality for $207 million, just weeks after the company closed a $3 billion funding round. Backers include Steve Aoki, Imagine Dragons, NBA star Rudy Gobert, and tennis player Taylor Fritz.
According to Sony, the acquisition should have triggered their right to terminate Napster’s licenses, but they agreed to keep the deal in place if Napster followed a payment plan to clear its $9.2 million debt. Not only did Napster allegedly skip those payments, Sony claims it kept streaming their music without permission.
For all the ownership changes and rebranding efforts, Napster still can’t seem to outrun its origin story — a company that made its name by breaking the rules, then tried to reinvent itself without fully abandoning the habits that got it famous in the first place.
Now, with the threat of tens of millions in damages hanging over its head, Napster faces yet another high-stakes courtroom battle. The only difference? This time, it’s not the piracy that’s in question — it’s whether the so-called “legit” Napster ever really learned to play fair.