GERMANY-COPYRIGHT-KRAFTWERK-MUSIC

(L-R) Judges Andreas Paulus, Johannes Masing, Gabriele Britz, Ferdinand Kirchhof (president), Susanne Baer and Reinhard Gaier arrive on November 25, 2015 at Germany's highest court in Karlsruhe as the court was examining a case that erupted 18 years ago over a German hip hop artist's two-second sample of a tune by electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk. Since the release of "Nur mir" in 1997, Kraftwerk's lead singer Ralf Huetter has been battling over the rights of the sequence against the producer Moses Pelham. AFP PHOTO / DPA / ULI DECK ++ GERMANY OUT / AFP / DPA / ULI DECK (Photo credit should read ULI DECK/DPA/AFP via Getty Images)
(L-R) Judges Andreas Paulus, Johannes Masing, Gabriele Britz, Ferdinand Kirchhof (president), Susanne Baer and Reinhard Gaier arrive on November 25, 2015 at Germany's highest court in Karlsruhe as the court was examining a case that erupted 18 years ago over a German hip hop artist's two-second sample of a tune by electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk. Since the release of "Nur mir" in 1997, Kraftwerk's lead singer Ralf Huetter has been battling over the rights of the sequence against the producer Moses Pelham. AFP PHOTO / DPA / ULI DECK ++ GERMANY OUT / AFP / DPA / ULI DECK (Photo credit should read ULI DECK/DPA/AFP via Getty Images)
GERMANY-COPYRIGHT-KRAFTWERK-MUSIC
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Credit:
ULI DECK / Staff
Editorial #:
498677790
Collection:
DPA
Date created:
25 November, 2015
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Release info:
Not released. More information
Source:
DPA
Barcode:
DPA
Object name:
DV2187779
Max file size:
4372 x 2920 px (37.02 x 24.72 cm) - 300 dpi - 3 MB