Playlist experienced legal issues early in its history. Those issues have been resolved. On April 28, 2008, the
RIAA and a coalition of nine record labels filed a lawsuit against the company for contributing to mass
copyright infringement. However, two similar cases against
MySpace and
Imeem were largely the opening moves in settlements which would see these music sites licensing the content and compensating artists for the use of their music. At the time of the lawsuit, Project Playlist already had begun contracts with
Sony BMG. On December 19, 2008, MySpace quickly began removing the Project Playlist music player from all profiles and subsequently leaving the affected users a message in their inbox which notified them of the removal. This amounted to a temporary ban of Project Playlist, largely due to complaints brought forth by the artists, asserting that Project Playlist should be paying royalties.
Facebook also later banned Project Playlist from its site. On May 11, 2010, it was reported that Playlist reached a settlement with
Universal Music Group and
Warner Music Group for an undisclosed amount. On February 1, 2013, the site playlist.com was acquired by a third party free of outstanding legal issues with the music recording and publishing industries. ==References==