Eminem’s Publisher Sues Meta Over ‘Lose Yourself’ and Other Hits—Copyright Lawsuit Puts Fa

June 2, 2025

Snapshots From the Legal Showdown:

  • Billions of Views, Zero License: Eminem’s publisher accuses Meta of letting users access 243 of his songs—including “’Till I Collapse” and “Lose Yourself”—without proper licensing, resulting in billions of unauthorized plays across Facebook and Instagram.
  • Music Library Under Fire: Eight Mile Style claims Meta “actively encourages” users to post content featuring Eminem’s music, despite repeated takedown requests and alleged reliance on a questionable third-party licensing deal.
  • Monetary Stakes Sky-High: The lawsuit demands damages based on Meta’s advertising windfall or statutory copyright penalties, plus a permanent injunction—raising the stakes for how Big Tech treats artists’ rights.

By Samuel Lopez – USA Herald

MICHIGAN – A fresh legal storm is brewing in Detroit’s federal court, and this time, it centers on the global reach of Facebook and Instagram—and the legendary catalog of Eminem. On Friday, Ferndale-based Eight Mile Style, the publisher behind Eminem’s most celebrated tracks, filed a blockbuster lawsuit accusing Meta of systematically allowing the unauthorized use of 243 of the rapper’s compositions across its platforms.



“Meta’s years-long and ongoing infringement … is another case of a trillion-dollar company exploiting the creative efforts of musical artists,” Eight Mile Style alleges in its complaint.

At the heart of the suit: claims that Meta improperly included Eminem’s hits like “’Till I Collapse” and “Lose Yourself” in its music libraries, which users can freely access when creating posts, stories, and videos. The publisher says these songs have been used in millions of videos—collectively viewed billions of times—without a valid license or proper compensation.

Eight Mile Style’s complaint details a pattern of persistent copyright violations: