Eminem’s Publisher Sues Meta Over ‘Lose Yourself’ and Other Hits—Copyright Lawsuit Puts Facebook, Instagram in the Hot Seat

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Damages Sought—And What Meta Stands to Lose

Eight Mile Style is pursuing two main remedies:

  • Monetary Damages:The publisher wants either a share of Meta’s advertising profits tied to videos using Eminem’s music—or, at minimum, statutory damages under U.S. copyright law, which can run up to $150,000 per infringed work.
  • Permanent Injunction:The suit also seeks a court order barring Meta from further distributing or making available Eminem’s tracks without proper authorization.

This dual-pronged approach aims not just to recoup past losses, but to set a powerful precedent for how Big Tech engages with music rights holders.

Meta Keeps Mum—But Industry Implications Are Huge

Meta, for its part, declined to comment on the lawsuit. But the case lands amid growing scrutiny of social platforms’ responsibility for the content—and copyrighted material—shared by their users. The outcome could reshape how Facebook, Instagram, and rivals handle licensing and royalties for musical content.

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As the suit puts it: “This is another case of a trillion-dollar company exploiting the creative efforts of musical artists.”

If successful, Eight Mile Style’s campaign could see Meta facing both financial penalties and a reworked approach to digital music licensing—potentially affecting not just Eminem, but countless other artists whose works fuel social media engagement.

Legal analysts are watching this case closely. The intersection of user-generated content, digital rights management, and billion-dollar ad revenues is one of the most hotly contested battlegrounds in today’s tech economy. With Eight Mile Style showing its willingness to litigate—and Meta’s platforms serving billions of users—the final outcome could set new boundaries for music licensing on the internet.

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