The judge found that Condé Nast owned “valid and incontestable” trademarks for Vogue and its logo and that Drake, 21 Savage, and the communications firm Hiltzik Strategies “created and disseminated” counterfeit images of a Vogue cover, as well as a reproduction of full issue, without the magazine’s authorization. 10 (obtained by Billboard), a judge ruled in favor of Vogue publisher Condé Nast, issuing a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction against the two rappers. The filing also states Drake and 21 Savage were not “conceding any liability” or “wrongdoing” in the matter. The rappers have “voluntarily ceased and desisted” from all uses of the faux cover and trademark, including all public displays of the fake cover online and any physical copies, Billboard reports.įiled on Thursday, the new document notes that the artists agreed to take down the image in order to “to avoid unnecessary cost and expense” and that they still plan to fight the case. Drake and 21 Savage have taken down the fake Vogue cover story following a lawsuit from publisher Condé Nast.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |