courtesy of Instagram/@mileycyrusMusicNewsMusic / NewsMiley Cyrus has settled a $300 million lawsuit over ‘We Can’t Stop’The Jamaican songwriter Flourgon accused her of stealing his material back in 2018ShareLink copied ✔️January 4, 2020January 4, 2020TextThom Waite Miley Cyrus has finally settled a $300 million copyright lawsuit brought against her in March 2018. The Jamaican songwriter Michael May – aka Flourgon – sued the singer and her label, RCA, in March 2018. He claimed her song “We Can’t Stop” stole material from his own track, “We Run Things”, from 1988. The main similarity in question was the “We Can’t Stop” lyric: “We run things, things don't run we.” Flourgon claimed that this too closely resembled his own (admittedly very similar) lyrics: “We run things, things no run we.” However, at the time, Cyrus’ lawyers argued that the lyrics weren’t copyrightable due to their own origins in a pre-existing Jamaican Patois phrase: “wi run tings, tings nuh run wi.” Either way, Miley, May, and Sony ended the lawsuit with prejudice on Friday (meaning it can’t be filed again). A settlement agreement has been signed, but the proceeds haven’t been revealed, Reuters reports. “We Can’t Stop” was the lead single from Miley Cyrus’s 2013 album Bangerz and peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 in the same year, coming in just behind Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines”. What a time to be alive. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE‘UK Ug’: How Gen Z Brits reinvented rap in 2025 How a century-old Danish brand became pop culture’s favourite sound systemDHLInside singer Sigrid’s intimate walks through nature with her fans ‘The unknown is exciting’: Why Gorillaz’ upcoming album is all about deathThe 20 best tracks of 2025, rankedThe 20 best albums of 2025, rankedThe renaissance of Zara Larsson: ‘I’m out of the Khia Asylum’The 10 best music videos of 2025, rankedListen to our shadowy Dazed Winter 2025 playlist7 of Chase Infiniti’s favourite K-pop tracksMeet The Deep, K-pop’s antihero ‘This is our Nirvana!’: Are Geese Gen Z’s first great rock band?