Kanye West has resolved a lawsuit accusing the rapper and entrepreneur of fraudulently inducing fans into subscribing to Jay-Z’s online streaming service Tidal by tweeting that it was the only place to obtain his 2016 album “The Life of Pablo.”
West, Tidal’s corporate parent and the plaintiff Justin Baker-Rhett on Wednesday filed a joint stipulation with the U.S. District Court in Manhattan to dismiss the proposed class-action case, which was originally filed in San Francisco in April 2016.
Terms of the resolution were unclear. Tidal and lawyers for all of the parties did not respond to requests for comment.
Baker-Rhett claimed to sign up for the $9.99-a-month Tidal service after West tweeted on Feb. 15, 2016, that “Pablo” would “never never never be on Apple. And it will never be for sale ... You can only get it on Tidal.”
The plaintiff called that a ploy to add subscribers to a struggling Tidal, and said the ploy became clear when West released “Pablo” 1-1/2 months later on Apple, Spotify and his own website.
“Pablo” was streamed 250 million times within 10 days of its release, the complaint said, citing Tidal.
Last June, U.S. District Judge Gregory Woods allowed Baker-Rhett to pursue a fraudulent inducement claim, because he had plausibly pleaded that West’s tweet was false. The judge dismissed other claims on jurisdictional grounds.
The case is Baker-Rhett v Aspiro AB et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 16-05801.