Soulja Boy stops cranking out knock-off consoles
Soulja Boy, who has been selling knock-off game consoles on his online store, has pulled the products and shut down his website.
Soulja Boy, who has been selling knock-off game consoles on his online store, has pulled the products and shut down his website.
It is actually illegal to share photos of the Eiffel Tower at night due to a loophole in European Union laws.
R&B singer Bobby Brown is suing the makers of the documentary about Whitney Houston for using unauthorised footage of him and his daughter.
Ed Sheeran has failed in his bid to dismiss a copyright infringement suit by the heirs of Ed Townsend, who claim he copied from the R&B classic "Let's Get It On" in Sheeran's song "Thinking Out Loud".
An author has accused bestselling author Nora Roberts of plagiarising a book title of hers. But book titles cannot be copyrighted.
Disney's trademark of the phrase "Hakuna Matata" is getting flak from Africans who think of it as cultural appropriation.
Netflix is being sued by the publisher of the Choose Your Own Adventure books for copyright infringement in its Black Mirror movie.
A game sued by Bethesda Softworks for being too similar to its game Fallout Shelter will shut down, one week after the developer and Bethesda settled out of court.
The most recent publishers of a popular children's song are being sued for copyright infringement. But even then it's unclear who wrote it.
Energy drink company Monster Energy, known for going after any other company that has words, slogans or designs that bear even a bit of similarity to its trademark, has gotten a win in court.
Cinders McLeod, a Canadian cartoonist, noticed similarities between Banksy’s works and some of her own when she attended an exhibit of Banksy’s works in Toronto earlier this year. She was surprised by how many of the exhibits reminded her of her own work.
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.
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