The Asian Age

Eminem’s publisher sues Spotify for unlicensed streaming

Publisher files copyright infringeme­nt case against streaming site

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Hollywood: Eminem’s music publisher has filed a copyright-infringeme­nt lawsuit against streaming giant Spotify over the hit Lose Yourself and more than 200 other songs, CNN reported.

The lawsuit alleges Eminem’s songs have streamed on Spotify billions of times without their publisher, Eight Mile Style, receiving sufficient royalties.

“Spotify has not accounted to Eight Mile or paid Eight Mile for these streams but instead remitted random payments of some sort, which only purport to account for a fraction of those streams,” the suit says.

The lawsuit also claims Spotify violated parts of the Music Modernizat­ion Act (MMA), a new law that aims to simplify the process by which musicians, songwriter­s

◗ The lawsuit alleges Eminem’s songs have streamed on Spotify billions of times without their publisher receiving sufficient royalties

◗ The lawsuit also claims Spotify violated parts of the Music Modernizat­ion Act, a new law that aims to simplify the process by which musicians and songwriter­s get compensate­d for music streamed online

and rights holders get compensate­d for music streamed online.

Spotify, the popular music-streaming service, did not respond to a request for comment from CNN.

The suit was filed Wednesday in federal court in Nashville by attorney Richard Busch, who famously helped the family of singer Marvin Gaye win a lawsuit against Robin Thicke

and Pharrell Williams for copyright infringeme­nt over the song Blurred Lines.

“This is an incredibly important lawsuit for all songwriter­s whose music appears on Spotify and other Digital Music Providers, and raises vital legal questions regarding the holding of companies truly responsibl­e in a meaningful way if a songwriter’s work has been used without permission or proper payment,” Busch wrote in an email to CNN. “Beyond that, everything we have to say is set forth in the Complaint.”

The lawsuit cites one of Eminem’s most popular songs, Lose Yourself. It alleges that Spotify labeled the 2002 song, along with many others, under “Copyright Control,” which would classify it as having an unknown rights holder.

The complaint also says it is “absurd” that Spotify claims it could not locate copyright owners “of one of the most well-known songs in history.”

Lose Yourself was a No. 1 hit from the movie 8 Mile, in which Eminem also starred. Eight Mile Style, the company that owns the rights to Eminem’s early catalogue, is named for that film.

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