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Kendrick Lamar, Drake "remove copyright" from diss tracks

www.newsweek.com Kendrick Lamar, Drake "remove copyright" from diss tracks

The rappers, who have been locked in a bitter war of words, have seemingly allowed influencers to monetize their reaction content.

Kendrick Lamar, Drake "remove copyright" from diss tracks
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  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Kendrick Lamar and Drake have allegedly removed copyright stipulations from the diss tracks aimed at each other as the rap rivals' war of words continues to grip social media.

    The current war of words got into full swing in March, when Lamar released "Like That," a cutting response to the Drake and J. Cole track "First Person Shooter."

    This can lead to the sound being removed from the offending clip, the video being taken down altogether, or potentially lucrative advertising revenue being diverted to the record label.

    Canadian musician and actor Drake denied this in his May 5 track, "The Heart Part 6," claiming that he and his associates had purposely planted misinformation to trick Lamar into using it during their battle.

    Drama between the two once again kicked up in late March, when Lamar hopped on "She's Like That," a track from Future and Metro Boomin's We Don't Trust You album, which was perceived as containing disses aimed at Drake.

    After hearing Lamar's verse on the track—which includes lyrics directly slamming Drake by referencing his song "First Person Shooter"—Drake dropped "Push Ups" on April 13.


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