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Kanye West facing potential class-action lawsuit for breaking Tidal exclusivity promise

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Kanye West’s epic Twitter rants could soon come back to bite him after a fan on Monday filed a lawsuit claiming that a tweet from the rapper mislead millions into buying subscriptions for Tidal, the Jay Z-owned music-streaming service.

Related: Discover new music. Start your free trial of Amazon Prime today

West premiered “The Life Of Pablo,” his seventh studio album, in February exclusively on Tidal. The move came as no surprise seeing as West is a part-owner of the service, but the rapper shocked many when he tweeted “My album will never never be on Apple. And it will never be for sale … You can only get it on Tidal.”

The announcement was a boon for Tidal, which until recently had struggled to compete with the likes of Apple Music and Spotify. The exclusive rights to the album saw Tidal gain millions of new users, but West went back on his words earlier this month — “The Life Of Pablo” is now available on Spotify and Apple Music.

West’s flip-flop on the album’s availability has been a point of confusion and frustration for his fans, and now one of those fans, Justin Baker-Rhett, has taken legal action. Baker-Rhett on Monday filed lawsuit against West and Tidal with the U.S. District Court in San Francisco and is seeking class-action status, according to the Associated Press.

The lawsuit claims West’s tweet tricked millions of users into signing up for Tidal, giving up important personal information like email addresses and credit card details. Many other users also paid the $9.99 per month subscription to access the album. Altogether, Baker-Rhett and his lawyers estimate Tidal and West gained as much as $84 million in value from the broken promise.

“We fully support the right of artists to express themselves freely and creatively, however creative freedom is not a license to mislead the public,” said Jay Edelson, Baker-Rhett’s attorney, in a statement to the Associated Press. “We believe that we will be able to prove to a jury that Mr. West and Tidal tricked millions of people into subscribing to their services and that they will ultimately be held accountable for what they did.”

What is spatial audio? Apple’s 3D sound feature fully explained
Person listening to spatial audio using Apple AirPods Max headphones.

At WWDC 2021 (Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference), Apple officially added support for spatial audio with Dolby Atmos Music for Apple Music. It quickly became a popular format among consumers, too: Apple estimates that by February 2022, playback of spatial audio tracks had quadrupled from just a few months prior as people experimented with the format. But what exactly is spatial audio? How is it different from (or the same as) Dolby Atmos? And what kind of audio equipment do you need to listen to it?

There's a lot of ground to cover, and some of it is a bit technical, but we're going to break it all down in easy-to-understand terms. You'll be a spatial audio expert in minutes, and you'll know exactly how to access this growing trend in movie and music streaming.
What exactly is spatial audio?

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With so many podcasts available, there’s no way that you can listen to all of them. To help you out, no matter your interests, we've gathered a variety of shows to turn you on to your next great listen.

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Rebirth of cool: Is vinyl ready for a second wind, or just a fad?

It doesn't matter one bit if your vinyl collection consists of just a single milk crate or if it fills several Ikea Kallax shelves and is slowly taking over your home — we can all agree that there's just something about vinyl.

Maybe it's the warm, uncompressed sound spinning off a solid turntable, or the feel of holding a physical piece of art in your hands while the record spins — it's a special experience that has regained much of its glory in a world dominated by digital streaming. The problem is, records are fragile, and crates full of them don't fit in your back pocket.

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