“When it’s something that’s done illegally or maliciously, it’s different,” Fiasco said in a recent interview with Billboard. “It’s songs you don’t even have as the artist, and some dude in the middle of nowhere that hacked into a computer has it. It upsets the balance of what you want to do as an artist and how you want to roll your album out.”
A few weeks ago, while speaking to Dr. Cornel West’s class at Princeton, Lupe claimed leaked tracks cost him upwards of $8,000 each. While he didn’t put a figure on the damages with Billboard, he added that engineers can be fired and studios potentially sued for song leaks.
All seems to be well now, as Lupe and Atlantic are working to promote the latest single, “The Show Goes On.”
“I think I set the precedent for record labels—showed everyone that you can have rappers that don’t fit the format and still have a presence,” Fiasco added. “You look at a person like me, or Kanye [West], and it was sort of a shock to the system. I definitely think I was part of changing that, and an influence to a lot dudes that are coming out today.”
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