Bruce Willis intends to sue Apple to give his children an inheritance of the music purchased through iTunes

  When you are a famous and rich actor, you are no longer pressured by the worries that ordinary people face every day, instead you think about what will happen to the music purchased from iTunes after you die. Bruce Willis thinks about this problem every day and even takes it into account the action of the Apple company in court to bequeath to his children all the music purchased through iTunes. Apple, Amazon, and other big stores that sell music basically only sell us the right to listen to the respective songs, and when we die this right is extinguished, our descendants having to buy the music again.

This license does not allow you to use the Licensed Application on any Apple Device that you do not own or control, and except as provided in the Usage Rules, you may not distribute or make the Licensed Application available over a network where it could be used by multiple devices at the same time. This license does not allow you to use the Licensed Application on any Apple Device that you do not own or control, and except as provided in the Usage Rules, you may not distribute or make the Licensed Application available over a network where it could be used by multiple devices at the same time.

  This is Willis' problem because he wants his children to have access to his entire music library after he dies, but he wants these rules not to apply to all consumers. He is thinking of suing Apple in 5 American states and asking the company to give up the regulation in the contract that we accept when using iTunes. It is hard to say if Willis will succeed in convincing any company that these rules are wrong, but influential people like him can generate very strong pressure, including against Apple or Amazon.

UPDATE: Wife of Bruce Willis he denied the rumor that the actor is thinking of suing Apple.

22 COMMENTS

  1. I think they are more or less gay. either it does it for everyone or it doesn't.
    "but he wants these rules not to apply to all consumers"

    if he can, I want to be able too, right?

  2. As if they will still listen to the music of now, for example I don't listen to Elvis because I'm not interested, and my grandchildren won't like Inna or fat xxl. It is as simple and logical as possible

  3. do you think he bought 4 songs? which one of you bought songs?? none, to pay for the songs he bought, you have to sell your phones and work for another 5 years. so don't think that it's about 4 dollars

  4. I would have liked this thing to go well. Apple should change the iTunes policies. To be able to allow the transfer of products that have been bought once, to other users, and to allow you to create @iCloud emails that will be the main Apple ID. I would love to have the iCloud email address that I can use anywhere, including as an APPLE ID! I could now have an iCloud email account (or in my case @Me) on any site in the world, except Apple. Does that sound smart to you?

  5. Well done Bruce. It's like Apple gives everything they move to court, it's their turn to stop believing the navel of the earth, I hope they ask them how much money they don't have to give.. Well done Bruce.

  6. Hang on... he dies but in his will he can leave his account and automatically with all the music bought right? Or am I wrong? now BMW or Mercedes, or women are no longer fashionable.. now it is fashionable to sue