article thumbnail

3 Count: Texas Chainsaw Lawsuit

Plagiarism Today

Though the Roses have repeatedly played host to the film’s writers, Toby Hooper and Kim Henke, Vortex claims they did not obtain a license for their theming and events. Vortex claims that they reached out in March 2016, but were strongly rebuffed, setting up this lawsuit.

article thumbnail

3 Count: The Box

Plagiarism Today

He adds that the song is well known in the rap industry, having been licensed by Def Jam in 2008 and by Epic Records in 2016. The 3 Count Logo was created by Justin Goff and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. The post 3 Count: The Box appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

3 Count: Turtle Defeat

Plagiarism Today

The two sides actually settled the case for $25 million back in 2016, but Sirius agreed to pay an additional $5 million for each Appeals Court win. According to Goldblatt, in 2016 he shot video of President Barack Obama visiting Flint and uploaded the footage to YouTube. So far, the plaintiffs have lost in every court.

article thumbnail

3 Count: Warhol Battle

Plagiarism Today

In 1984, Lynn licensed one of her photographs of the musician Prince to be converted into a painting by Warhol for Vanity Fair magazine. However, after Prince died in 2016, it was revealed that Warhol actually made an additional 14 prints using the photograph. The post 3 Count: Warhol Battle appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

3 Count: Granted Cert

Plagiarism Today

She licensed the photo to Vanity Fair magazine for use as an artist reference. However, Warhol went beyond the single licensed work and created 15 additional works known as the Prince Series , which became public after the musician’s death in 2016. The post 3 Count: Granted Cert appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

3 Count: Bottom Start

Plagiarism Today

The lawsuit was filed by a pair of songwriters that claimed the 2019 track was an infringement of their earlier song 2016 song I Love Your Dress. The 3 Count Logo was created by Justin Goff and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. The post 3 Count: Bottom Start appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

3 Count: Contemptible Rimini

Plagiarism Today

” The lawsuit was filed in October Brandon Cooper and Timothy Valentine, who alleged that the duo took their 2016 song I Love Your Dress and used it to create No Guidance. The 3 Count Logo was created by Justin Goff and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License.