Judge Might Allow Piracy Defendant to Comb Through 2257 Records

CHICAGO — A federal judge in Chicago yesterday, making a preliminary ruling in a porn piracy case, said that a defendant may potentially be allowed to comb through X-Art.com's 2257 records in discovery in support of an "unclean hands" defense.

The unnamed defendant in Malibu Media vs. John Doe, subscriber assigned IP address 24.14.139.173, asked the court to dismiss the copyright infringement case on grounds that X-Art's parent company, Malibu Media, had unclean hands because it allegedly keeps "incomplete, deficient or fabricate records of the performers in its works."

Courts won't adjudicate a case if a judgment for a plaintiff would encourage criminal or unlawful activity, including violation of the federal record-keeping act, 18 U.S.C. § 2257, which requires anyone who produces sexually explicit content to create and maintain individually identifiable records pertaining to every performer portrayed in such a visual depiction.

"Doe contends that [i]f any of the sexually explicit films featuring young-looking girls at issue here ... were feloniously produced in violation of the strict record-keeping requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 2257 ... then the court should not enforce copyright monopolies for such films,' " U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly said.

"The court is not prepared to say that federal copyright law would permit one who has produced child pornography — which cannot be legally produced or distributed anywhere in the U.S. — or who has failed to comply with federally mandated requirements aimed to deter production of child pornography to enforce a copyright relating to such material."

As a result, Kennelly declined to strike Doe's unclean hands defense in the preliminary ruling, but he will require Doe to establish that X-Art has violated the law with respect to one or more of the particular films that are the subject of its copyright infringement claims.

Kennelly also said in the ruling that the court is unprepared to rule out the possibility that Doe can establish an "implied license defense" based on "seeding" by X-Art onto BitTorrent of the particular films upon which its claim against Doe is based.

Doe contended as a defense that the alleged "seeded" content invited others to download it. He alleges that this amounted to an implied license, precluding a claim of infringement.

Attorney Morgan Pietz, who represents Doe, said that although some other affirmative defenses were stricken in the case, the bottom line is that the decision represented "a pretty significant win" for end users involved in John Doe porn litigation.

"[X-Art] has probably created a pretty troubling precedent for the adult industry with this new decision out of the Northern District of Illinois," Pietz told XBIZ. "The broader implication is that when an adult company goes into court to sue for copyright infringement, it had better be sure its Section 2257 house is in order." 

Pietz said that aside from explaining to the court why a Section 2257 defense was different from an obscenity defense, one of the other arguments he made was that X-Art invited scrutiny by filing more than 2,000 copyright infringement lawsuits in three years time.

Kennelly set a telephone status hearing between counsel for next week.

View memorandum opinion and order

Related:  

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Ohio AG Threatens Action Against 'Major' Adult Sites Over AV Law

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced today that his office is sending "notice of violation" letters to 19 adult websites for failure to comply with the state's recently enacted age verification law.

Chaturbate Announces 2025 Music Contest Winners

Chaturbate has revealed the winners of its 2025 music competition.

2026 XBIZ Exec Awards Pre-Noms Open With Debut of New 'Impact' Honors

XBIZ is pleased to announce that the pre-nomination period for the 2026 XBIZ Exec Awards, the adult industry’s premier career honor, begins today and runs through Oct. 14.

MYM Rolls Out New Traffic Features for German Creators

German platform MYM has launched a new traffic system for its creators.

Ukrainian Content Creators on Hook for Nearly $10M in Back Taxes

Content creators in Ukraine owe the equivalent of $9.3 million in back taxes, according to the country's State Tax Service.

Updated: European Patent Office Board of Appeals Revokes EIS GmbH Patent

The European Patent Office (EPO) Board of Appeals last week ruled in favor of pleasure brand LELO in the company's ongoing dispute with Satisfyer parent company EIS GmbH.

Eroutique Relaunches Site Through YourPaysitePartner

Eroutique has relaunched its official website through YourPaysitePartner (YPP).

Update: Pornhub Will Not Block Ohio, Despite AV Law

Pornhub parent company Aylo will not block access to its websites in Ohio, despite new state age verification rules that came into effect Sept. 30.

Pineapple Support, Pornhub to Host 'ADHD-Friendly' Support Group

Pineapple Support and Pornhub are hosting a free online support group for performers with ADHD.

Judge Dismisses Some Claims in 'Children of Pornhub' Trafficking Suit

A United States district judge on Friday dismissed some but not all claims against Aylo in a long-running case involving CSAM allegations featured in the influential 2020 New York Times article “The Children of Pornhub.”

Show More