Zernio
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Warner Music and Crumbl just finalized a settlement after a copyright fight over music used in social media promos. The claim: Crumbl used major-label songs across TikTok and Instagram marketing without proper authorization. The potential statutory damages were reported as high as $150,000 per infringed work. That should get every artist's attention. Not because every independent artist is about to sue a national brand tomorrow. But because this is where the market is going: Music in short-form content is not just background noise anymore. It is commercial infrastructure. Brands know it. Labels know it. Platforms know it. The question is whether artists know it. The artist-side lesson is just as important: if you want leverage, you need to think like the label around your own work. Ownership is not just about bragging rights. It is about having the structure to say yes, no, or pay me correctly. That means artists need cleaner rights habits now: - know who owns the master - know who controls the publishing - register the work properly - document splits before the song moves - understand when a use is promotional, commercial, or platform-native - do not treat viral usage as automatically harmless The opportunity is real. But opportunity only pays the artist who can prove what they own. If your music is part of somebody else's marketing engine, your paperwork needs to be as serious as your creativity. #MusicRights #Copyright #MusicBusiness #IndependentArtists Source article: https://www.digitalmusicnews.com/2026/06/22/wmg-crumbl-cookies-lawsuit-settlement/