もっと詳しく

This time by someone who actually has a chance to win.

The year was 2018. We played Red Dead Redemption 2swore to the English when they beat us in the World Cup and consumed news that Epic had been sued for Fortnite-dancing on the assembly line. And now we are there again, with Fortnitethe moods then.

All five previous lawsuits were rejected by the court, as none of the alleged authors actually owned the rights to them, but this is not the case this time. The choreographer Kyle Hanagami owns the copyright to the dance steps we see in the music video for How Long by Charlie Puth from 2017, and which apparently now also appeared in Fortnite.

Below you see a video with the dance in the music video and the dance in Fortnite side by side, and surely seventeen are they identical? According to lawsuit Epic has neither asked Hanagami for permission nor referred to him in any way. Now he demands that they stop selling the dance in Fortnite and that he is compensated with an unspecified amount.

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