Rappers Are Taking a Stand Against Gossip Bloggers and Misinformation

Artists like Cardi B are taking legal action against gossip bloggers who spread misinformation online. Here’s why it’s important and what could happen next.

Cardi B Getty image Nicholas Hunt
Getty

Image via Getty/Nicholas Hunt

Cardi B Getty image Nicholas Hunt

In January, Cardi B won a $4 million defamation of character lawsuit against blogger Latasha “Tasha K” Kebe for what a judge ruled as repeated lies about the rap star. Then Cardi sought a gag order against Tasha K, hinting that she would pursue further legal action for what her team described as Tasha’s “promises to keep harassing” her. The ruling sent shockwaves through the industry, not just because of the dollar amount, but because of the precedent it set for bloggers to be penalized for publishing misinformation. Since then, two other artists have threatened to follow suit, in response to reckless social media posts. 

At the end of February, Teyana Taylor hinted at suing a TikToker who claimed the singer was abusing drugs because of marriage woes. And soon after, Megan Thee Stallion chastised DJ Akademiks for a misleading report he made about her ongoing trial with Tory Lanez, warning on her Instagram Story, “Don’t get sued trying to create a hate campaign. Be a real journalist and post FACTS.”

Gossip merchants aren’t journalists, and therefore have no one to answer to when they’re wrong about an artist’s legal proceedings or the Queen of England “dying.” But after the ruling in Cardi B’s case, bloggers, YouTube pundits, and social media rap accounts are now on notice that they could face legal action for the information they share. 

Most people believe celebrities are justified in holding people accountable for sharing fake news, but anti-carceral onlookers believe that celebrities wielding their power (and working with the legal system to destroy people’s financial future) is too harsh of a clapback. There’s precedent for high-profile litigation to end with millions in punitive damages that are up to a judge’s discretion and exist strictly to punish defendants. That conversation will be ongoing, as more artists seek to sue over misinformation.

Megan Thee Stallion
Cardi B

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