Eminem's legal attack on Apple reaches critical point
Eminem’s litigious people make the news again, on reports that talks between the rapper’s ‘people’ and Apple legal are at a critical point, if both parties want to avoid a public spat in the US courts.
It’s a complex issue of music, distribution rights and music industry lawyers. In its briefest explanation, Eminem’s people are suing Apple and the Aftermath label for selling 93 Eminem tracks through iTunes. This is because Eminem’s Eight Mile High says neither the label nor Apple had the rights to sell digital downloads.
Eight Mile High is claiming Apple may have made as much as $2.5 million from sales of the rapper’s songs through iTunes (we don’t buy that, by the way). Eminem filed suit in 2005.
In legal documents filed to the Eastern District Court in Michigan, Eight Mile - along with co-plaintiff Martin Affiliated - alleges that Aftermath only had the rights to negotiate CD sales, not online distribution.
“Apple's reproduction and distribution of the digital transmissions via iTunes constitutes a continuing, and willful, infringement of Eight Mile's and Martin's copyright interests,” the allegation states.
Apple denies these claims, arguing its deal with Aftermath (which provided the tracks and permissions) is legitimate.
It’s not the first time Eminem has fought Apple. Four years ago the two settled out of court after Apple ran a much-publicised advert that featured a trademark silhouetted figure dancing to the song Lose Yourself.
However, on this new case, should a deal not be agreed by the end of today, the case will go before a federal court in Michigan in a non-jury trial set to open on Thursday.
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Comments (11)
The power of a distribution and retail channel as big as iTunes is that you don't want to piss it off- Apple loses, good luck finding Slim Shady and *Eight Mile High* productions in the ITMS.
i always thought Eminem was the owner of eight mile style. i wonder who these guys are and what they did in Eminem's early career to warrant ownership of his music
I hope that Apple removes of his music from the store and never picks it back up. Then they wont have to worry about him crying and his sucky music wont have to be heard on iPods around the world.
so he makes this video with apple, thinking his music isn't going to be sold in the iTunes store? I'm confused.
i agree. Ban it. See how much money they make when the leading music retailer in the U.S. won't sell his stuff.
This goof is getting on my nerves. I wish Apple would drop his crap music. Go back to 8 mile, you turd!
Well he's a legitimately high selling Artist. If he got screwed over, he deserves to bitch. It'll all be revealed soon enough. I buy music based on the music not based on which retailer carries the content, and how successful the said retailer is. I'm sure most music fans would. I would just buy the physical disk and import it. I prefer it that way anyway.
why don't you guys report this news accurately? eminem isn't suing them. eminem had no control over this - it's his publishing company. eminem is not gonna get a dime out of this. he's one of the top selling artist the past decade, so what made you not buy the 2.5 million he generated from itunes? you guys almost report as biasly as the engadget fanboys.
First of all don't talk shit about eminem because you know u wont ever be able to be hime, you will never make as much money as him and you'll never be able to rap as good as him. fag
All I'd argue is I doubt the publishing royalties (the amount in question here) amounted to $2.5 million in that period.
The figure may be high, the gross income may be that, but the publishing royalty (usually anything up to 11 per cent of gross after breakages, depending on which shit deal a publishing company has offered the artist) is highly unlikely to be that much, at the end of the day.
I like Eminem, BTW. I also like Skinnyman, himself a terribly underated UK performer. Worth a listen, in my opinion, but very much for the UK streets.
I'd have Apple's lawyer's to ask Eminem to give back all the money they made him in sales, stop selling his music and call it even.