Amazon Reportedly to Settle FyreTV Trademark Lawsuit

Amazon Reportedly to Settle FyreTV Trademark Lawsuit

ATLANTA, Ga. — Amazon and FyreTV owner Wreal are reportedly finalizing a confidential settlement of the trademark infringement lawsuit that the adult streaming service originally brought against the online retail giant in 2014.

The settlement was first reported by Bloomberg Law earlier this month.

Wreal’s original complaint alleged that consumers could mistake Amazon’s Fire TV for its own adult FyreTV service, trademarked in 2007.

As XBIZ reported, in June 2022 the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the case against Amazon could move forward. The appellate court’s opinion overturned a Florida federal judge’s decision, which had granted summary judgment in Amazon’s favor.

Another judge had issued an even earlier decision finding “little chance that consumers would confuse a normal streaming device with an app dedicated to hardcore pornography,” Law360 reported.

The 11th Circuit instead considered the situation as a “reverse-confusion” case.

“In reverse-confusion cases, the plaintiff is usually a commercially smaller, but more senior, user of the mark at issue,” the appellate judges explained. “The defendant tends to be a commercially larger, but more junior, user of the mark.”

Although the lower court had found that consumers were not likely to confuse the two trademarks, the appellate judges ruled that the district judge “should have analyzed whether Amazon’s Fire TV mark could cause a consumer to associate FyreTV with Amazon,” Law360 reported.

The panel also found that “although Amazon’s product does not broadcast hardcore pornography, it does have apps for Showtime and HBO Go, both of which broadcast softcore pornography as part of their after-hours programming,” Law360 explained, adding that “hardcore pornographic DVDs are also available for purchase on Amazon.com.”

The panel held that it would therefore “not be unreasonable” for a consumer to think Amazon was behind FyreTV.

When Amazon initially released Fire TV, a Fortune report on the current settlement negotiations explained, “customers who went to firetv.com likely received a shock” because FyreTV “had acquired that domain three years earlier, apparently expecting people to misspell its name. Subscribers were able to stream explicit XXX content directly to their TVs via Roku and other third party set-top boxes at the time.”

Since 2014, Amazon has shipped more than 200 million Fire TV devices, Fortune reports.

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

'White-Hot' Party Set to Kick Off XBIZ Miami

XBIZ is pleased to announce that the annual White-Hot Party, the official opening bash of XBIZ Miami, is set for Monday, May 19, at Mynt Lounge in South Beach.

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches for March, April

AEBN has announced the top search terms for March and April from its straight and gay theaters in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Takedown Piracy Adds 'Search Max' Feature

Takedown Piracy has launched Search Max, a search engine for detecting, verifying, and removing Google infringements.

Sex Workers' Group Fights Proposed Swedish Ban on 'Remote' Sexual Services

The European Sex Workers’ Rights Alliance (ESWA) has launched a campaign against a Swedish government proposal to expand current laws against purchasing sexual services to apply to acts performed remotely by cammers, streamers and custom content creators.

FSC: Arizona Governor Signs Controversial Age Verification Law

Free Speech Coalition has released a statement regarding Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs signing the state's age verification bill into law.

NCOSE Sues 4 Adult Websites Under Kansas Age Verification Law

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE), a conservative anti-pornography organization, has sued four adult websites in Kansas under the state's age verification law.

Sarina Havok, Robin Coffins Launch New Site Through Grooby's Blue.xxx

Sarina Havok and Robin Coffins have launched their new membership site, SarinaAndRobin.com, through Grooby's website management company Blue.xxx.

SpankChain Pauses SpankPay, SpankMatch

SpankChain has paused SpankPay, its adult crypto payment platform, and SpankMatch, its adult networking platform.

Sen. Mike Lee Tries Again to Criminalize All Porn With Interstate Obscenity Definition Act

Republican Senator Mike Lee of Utah has introduced the Interstate Obscenity Definition Act, which would redefine almost all visual depictions of sex as obscene and therefore illegal.

Ofcom Investigates 2 Adult Sites for AV Noncompliance

U.K. media regulator Ofcom is investigating two adult sites for failure to comply with age assurance requirements under the Online Safety Act, which Ofcom is charged with enforcing.

Show More