

Lol i dont hear any similarity in this song w gooba. Yall reaching way past yall wingspan if you think gooba sounds like this🤣🤣 Comment by Frederick Szczepanski Least you got people coming here tho Comment by Philosophic This shit weak asf sounds nun like gooba i swear bubs do anything fa clout or bread Comment by TroyRaps Nah yall reachin this dont sound like Gooba!!! Smh Comment by User 710352526 Not even gooba nigga smh Comment by Choo Lou 🤷🏻♂️ Comment by ShamanĬlouts chasers, i dislike the rat however the picture for this is him, clearly you wanted him to notice yall Comment by Sophisticated Patrician This beat doesnt sound enough like gooba for yall to have a case lol.

Comment by XxJOExXĦix9ine ripped u off im so sorry Comment by 3Produced The 3 Count Logo was created by Justin Goff and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License.Beats : Youtube : Instagram : Twitter : Facebook : Contact : by Intent on VibesĬan you guys even hear? it's clearly the same melody. Further, they claim they created their icons independently and did not copy her work.
#Beatdemons regular vs gooba skin
Through her iDiversicons app, she made it possible for users to pick multiple skin tones for their Emoji and claims that Apple then implemented a similar system directly into their mobile operating system.Īpple has responded to the lawsuit saying that no one can own the copyright to the idea of multiple skin tones for Emoji as ideas are not protectable under copyright. Now She’s Suing Apple.įinally today, Reed Albergotti at the Washington Post reports that artist Katrina Parrott has filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against Apple claiming that the company took her idea for Emoji with multiple skin tones and implemented it without her permission.Īccording to Parrott, she presented her idea (and her app) directly to Apple in 2013. 3: She Brought Diverse Skin Tones Emoji to the iPhone. With the deadline for the document approaching, the minister says that the statement is necessary not to change the law, but because copyright law is very complicated, and many cosplayers are finding it hard to decide when and if they need to get permission. Now, in an interview, an unnamed member of Intellectual Property Strategy Headquarters Cabinet Office said that the move is not about adding new restrictions but simply clarify existing ones. Next up today, Spencer Baculi at Bounding Into Comics reports that the Japanese government has further clarified the nature of the upcoming cosplay law clarifications saying that their aim is to not restrict any cosplay activities and merely clarify which activities require permission.Įarlier this year, the government announced that it was going to review the laws surrounding copyright and fair use as they pertain to cosplay and write a clarification on them. 2: Japanese Government Clarifies That Aim Of Current Cosplay Copyright Debate “Is Not To Restrict Any Cosplay Activities” That case briefly caused GOOBA to be removed from YouTube before being restored. It’s also not the first legal battle Tekashi has faced over GOOBA as, in June, Kenyan producer Magix Enga claimed that the song was a copy of one his beats. In an interesting twist, BEATDEMONS released Regular with a description that called it a “6ix9ine x Cardi B type beat”. As such, they are seeking all the profits made from their work. The lawsuit claims that the two tracks have the same melody, form, structure and function.


The lawsuit was filed by the group BEATDEMONS, which are suing Tekashi alleging that GOOBA copied from their original track Regular. Have any suggestions for the 3 Count? Let me know via Twitter 1: Tekashi 6ix9ine sued for alleged copyright infringement on ‘GOOBA’įirst off today, Patrick Clark at NME reports that a Texas production group has filed a lawsuit against rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine for alleged copyright infringement in Tekashi’s hit song GOOBA.
