Vapor
Social video platform Triller has filed a patent infringement lawsuit against its biggest rival TikTok and parent company ByteDance. The suit, which was filed in the U.S District Court for the Western Division of Texas, claims TikTok is infringing on Triller’s U.S Patent No. 9,691,429. The patent covers “systems and methods for creating music videos synchronized with an audio track.”
The patent credits
Triller co-founders David Leiberman and Samuel Rubin as the inventors.
It was originally filed on April 11, 2015 and granted on June 27, 2017.
The
patent describes a way to create videos syncing to audio, including in
some cases, when one or more video takes are captured while the selected
audio track plays. The company says TikTok is now infringing on this
feature by allowing its own users to stitch together multiple videos
while using the same audio track.
Triller’s filing shows how
TikTok works, in terms of choosing a single audio track to play
alongside a video. It also points to a TikTok Newsroom blog post dated
December 11, 2019, where TikTok introduces a new “green screen video”
effect. The post describes the effect as a way users can shoot over
videos playing in the background synced to audio. This is presented as
an example of the infringing use in the lawsuit.
In the filing, Triller says that TikTok was served notice of its infringement on July 27, 2020 by way of email.
TikTok
is not the only company to offer an app with videos synced to an audio
track like this, but it is the largest. Today, the TikTok app has over
189 million U.S. installs to date, versus Triller’s 23 million+,
according to data from app store intelligence firm Sensor Tower. The
only other competitor to have more installs than Triller is Dubsmash,
with 41.5 million U.S. downloads to date. Lomotif, Likee and Byte have
less traction, with 21.2 million, 16 million and 2.5 million U.S.
installs, respectively.
We understand Triller may be planning to
pursue its patent claims against other competitors as well, including
Dubsmash, Instagram (for its Reels product) and Lomotif. But these
claims may be filed one at a time, rather than all at once, as the
lawyers work to detail how each individual app experience infringes.
Reached for comment, Dubsmash said it has not received anything from Triller.
“We
would find the claim far fetched considering Dubsmash launched six
months prior to their service ever launching on the App Store and Play
Store,” noted Dubsmash co-founder and president Suchit Dash. TikTok had
so far yet to respond to requests for comment. Instagram has no comment
No other cases from Triller are on file as of the time of writing.
Musical.ly
(which ByteDance acquired to turn into TikTok) also has a patent
related to “generating and sharing lip-sync videos,” filed in 2016 and
granted in 2017, but this patent isn’t referenced in the lawsuit.
Asked
how Triller plans to finance such a lawsuit, the company responded that
it’s backed by some of the largest institutions in the world, and is
prepared to take the matter to court.
Triller, in actuality, is
funded by Lowercase Capital, Carnegie Technologies, film-production
company Proxima Media, Taiwan’s Fubon Financial Holding Co. and
Indonesia’s GDP Venture. The WSJ reported last year Triller had raised
$28 million in venture funding, valuing its business at $130 million. To
date, the company has raised $37.5 million, according to Crunchbase.
News of Triller’s lawsuit was first covered by The Wrap and Bloomberg Law.
The lawsuit arrives at a time when TikTok’s app is coming under increasing scrutiny in the U.S.
Just
yesterday, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin confirmed TikTok’s app was
being reviewed by the department’s Committee on Foreign Investment in
the U.S. His statements followed those of Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo, who said earlier this month the U.S. was looking at banning
TikTok, as well as other Chinese social media apps, due to national
security concerns.
If that were to occur, Triller would likely
benefit. And the timing of its filing, given this context, is not at all
coincidental.
The company this week was also reported to be
raising new funds. Fox Business reported Triller was raising $200-300
million amid talk of a TikTok ban.
In particular, Triller’s leadership is aghast that TikTok is incentivizing its users to post videos exclusively on its platform.
“We
were shocked to learn TikTok is actually using their influencer funds
to pay influencers to actually not post on Triller, in fact to prohibit
any posting on Triller,” Triller CEO Mike Lu said. Hoping to capitalize
on growing negative sentiment around big tech, as evidenced by
yesterday’s antitrust hearings, he also added that such a move was
anti-competitive on TikTok’s part.
“It’s neither ethical nor
legal in our opinion,” said Lu. “If every 200B company could just pay
their customers to not join a startup competitor, entrepreneurship in
America would die and no new companies could ever exist.”
Source: techcrunch.com
Author:Sarah Perez
Editor:Vapor