courtesy of Instagram/@mileycyrusMusicNewsMiley 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, 2020MusicNewsTextThom 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 MORESlew’s dream night out involves stupidity and ‘special water’ Exclusive BTS images of PinkPantheress and JT’s latest music videoSAMRATTAMA is making indie music for an independent Kazakhstan5 Easter eggs from Dave’s new albumGrime MC JayaHadADream: ‘bell hooks changed my life’‘I fuck with them all’: How OsamaSon got his cult-like fanbaseWhat went down at Kraków's Unsound Festival 2025‘He’s part of the fabric of my life’: Young Black fans remember D’AngeloBloodz Boi: The humble godfather of Chinese underground rapA rare interview with POiSON GiRL FRiEND, dream pop’s future seerNigeria’s Blaqbonez is rapping to ‘beat his high score’Inside Erika de Casier’s shimmering R&B universe