Eight months after suing over the failed deal, SourceAudio says in a new lawsuit that Utopia's "gameplaying must come to an end.”
Cesar Pina says The Breakfast Club co-host was "never in the room" and doesn't deserve to be "bashed" on social media.
A songwriter says she was pressured into "unwanted sexual intercourse” out of fear for her career, and that Kobalt didn't do enough to stop it.
In this week's Legal Beat, Universal Music targets AI training, DJ Envy's pal is charged with running a Ponzi scheme, Megan settles with her label and more.
A former fellow inmate at a prison in Ohio says McFarland owes him $740,000.
A judge ruled that the dispute -- a Spanish artist suing two Brits -- clearly didn't belong in his Louisiana federal courthouse.
After more than three years of bitter litigation, record label 1501 Certified Entertainment says the two sides will now "amicably part ways."
Federal prosecutors say Cesar Pina "partnered with a celebrity disc jockey" to promote himself as a real estate guru.
The lawsuit is the first major case aimed squarely at whether artificial intelligence platforms can be "trained" on copyrighted music.
"Many members of Congress have no idea that there are people making music in their own backyard," says Todd Dupler, the Recording Academy’s chief advocacy & public policy officer.