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There's an analysis at: https://blog.ericgoldman.org/archives/2022/02/a-glimmer-of-h...

> The cap likely will encourage aggressive copyright enforcers to stay in federal court and skip the CCB altogether...

> Based on this analysis, the caps (10 proceedings/year for copyright owners or 40/yr for law firms) seem to deter many potential CCB users. If the plaintiffs’ lawyers aren’t steering clients towards it, and if both the firms and copyright owners see more value in consolidating cases in federal court, the CCB will most likely cater to the copyright owner who doesn’t have a lawyer and views an occasional small claims proceeding as its best hope; and possibly the rare circumstances where a CCB proceeding will be more lucrative than a federal court proceeding (like where the owner has an unregistered copyright and would prefer the statutory damages available only in the CCB). If these become the main CCB use cases, I imagine there will be dozens of CCB cases in a year, not thousands or even hundreds, and the CCB will not be an especially important adjudicatory venue.



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