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SOURCE: A screenshot of a café playlist on Spotify

Musicians are being ripped off by cafes streaming music illegally

According to a study by Nielson Music, commissioned by Soundtrack Your Brand, a background music company backed by music streaming service Spotify shows musicians are losing out on an estimated US$2.7 million every year because their music are listened to illegally.

Source: https://www.scribd.com/document/390742033/Adaptive-Studios-v-Zimbalist#from_embed

Music documentary idea stolen

TJ Barrack and his business partner Marc Joubert are suing Jeff and Michael Zimbalist for allegedly copying their concept for Remastered, a documentary series that will explore seminal events in the lives of artists such as Bob Marley, Johnny Cash, Jam Master Jay and Sam Cooke.

Image credit: Petapixel

Photographer thunderstruck by photo rip-off

Photographer Sean R. Heavey claims a 2010 photo he took of a supercell thunderstorm, which he called The Mothership, was used by Netflix in their hit series Stranger Things and a Netflix feature-length movie, How It Ends. Netflix denies this. But for photographers, seeing their work reproduced is unfortunately a very common occurrence.

Source: Joltmycar Facebook page

A rude Jolt for a creator

Mark Robinson was watching television when he got a rude jolt – his invention, Jolt My Car, had appeared on screen under a different name, marketed by a different company.

Screenshot of Bula Nation’s website

Can a national greeting be stolen?

The government of Fiji says it is contesting the trademark of the word “bula”, which was registered by an American company operating a chain of bars in Florida called Bula Nation.
“Bula” apparently means “life”, but is used as a greeting and good wishes, and is used only on the island of Fiji.
Calling it a case of “heritage-hijacking”, Fiji said it is preparing legal action against the owner

What can you do if government officials steal your ideas?

A Kenyan man is claiming credit for a website launched by the country's Ministry of Education earlier this year.
Ministry officials have taken credit for the website, National Education Management Information System (NEMIS), which stores the records of the academic performance of students.
Daniel Kimencu, through his company Bay Concepts Ltd, is demanding compensation, recognition as the cop

Source: Joltmycar Facebook page

A rude Jolt for a creator

Mark Robinson was watching television when he got a rude jolt – his invention, Jolt My Car, had appeared on screen under a different name, marketed by a different company.

This is how the story was written in South Africa

The fight over Mandela's R2.1billion smile

South African's Government Communication Information System (GCIS) has been accused of misappropriating a famous photograph of Nelson Mandela. It shows yet again to PitchMark your work to stop such issues from arising.

SOURCE: https://theblast.com/nicky-hilton-paparazzi-lawsuit/

Celebrities sued for stealing paparazzi photos… of themselves

Paparazzi pose a strange problem to celebrities – they make money off the photos they take of the celebrities, while the celebrities do not make a cent. So it is a kind of poetic justice when celebrities start stealing photos from paparazzi, usually when they copy the photos from the website of a news outlet that has licensed the photos.

Photo credit: masses.com.my

Bagging a tea slogan lands agency in hot water

The Malaysian branch of major international advertising agency TBWA has found itself infused in hot water over claims a slogan for a bubble tea franchise was copied from a local motorcycling lifestyle brand.
The slogan "Never fear the strong. Especially strong tea" was recently adopted by Tealife in a major rebranding exercise (forced upon owner Loob Holdings by a dispute dubbed the "bubble tea

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