Fox Rothschild and the ‘Dark Art of Copyright Trolling’

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Greg Lansky with four adult film performers at the 2017 AVN Adult Entertainment Expo held at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.[/caption] Through the first six months of this year, 2,864 copyright infringement suits were filed in U.S. district courts, giving 2018 a good chance at being the most copyright-litigious year in recent memory. About twice the number of copyright suits have been filed at the midway point compared to last year, and the spike can be traced directly, more or less, to two pornography studios and one Am Law 100 firm: Fox Rothschild. One of those studios, Malibu Media LLC, is an old pro in the mass copyright enforcement game, having filed nearly 7,000 suits in the past decade. The company’s suits were profiled in The New Yorker in 2014, but it has nevertheless ramped up its litigation machine this year following a dispute with its former law firm that led to a largely lost year in 2017. Through June, Malibu Media had filed on average more than three cases a day, according to data from legal analytics platform Lex Machina. The relative newcomer to the scene is a litigant known as Strike 3 Holdings LLC. The company makes pornographic films under the brands “Vixen,” “Tushy” and “Blacked.” Its semi-Instagram-famous founder is a sturdy, bearded Frenchman named Greg Lansky who has won an industry award for director of the year three years in a row, partly thanks to a female empowerment message. “What you do is art,” he said to a cheering crowd the last time he received the award. Lansky was profiled earlier this year in a Rolling Stone story that said he was turning the porn industry into “high art,” mostly thanks to pricey photo shoots such as one where a bikini-clad model’s stilettoed feet dangle outside a helicopter over Los Angeles. “Who the hell is going to have me hang out of a helicopter for porn’s sake?” the adult film actress, Tori Black, asked in the article. “That was a great shoot,” said Fox Rothschild’s Lincoln Bandlow, a Los Angeles-based partner who has also been commissioned by Lansky. In Bandlow’s case, he has overseen most of the 870 copyright infringement suits that Fox Rothschild has filed on behalf of Strike 3 in the first six months of 2018. Bandlow served as president of the Los Angeles Copyright Society in 2005 and he has represented movie studios, filmmakers and publishers in a legal career that began with his graduation from the Boston University School of Law in 1993. A look at his Twitter profile, @LALincolnLawyer, shows that Bandlow is an advocate for free speech and the First Amendment. And that’s before you find out that he has been a visiting professor at the University of Southern California’s journalism school for more than two decades. Bandlow also grew up in the same San Fernando Valley that has long been the epicenter of the porn business. That is perhaps one reason that Bandlow and Fox Rothschild are the first Am Law 100 firm to represent a porn production company in a nationwide copyright enforcement campaign. Bandlow said he spoke with his firm’s leadership about taking on Strike 3 as a client to make sure they were “comfortable.” He also said he asks individual lawyers who work on the cases whether they have any qualms about representing a porn company. Fox Rothschild, no stranger to quirky clients, declined to discuss the matter. [caption id="attachment_18928" align="alignright" width="245"]