A man who stole and leaked unreleased Beyoncé tracks has been sentenced to 18 months in prison, in what lawyers are calling a landmark case for copyright law in the age of streaming. But for many in the music industry, the question is whether the punishment fits the crime when the real culprits are the streaming giants who pay pennies per play.
The defendant, a 33-year-old IT worker from Manchester, admitted hacking into the singer's cloud storage account and uploading unfinished songs to a private forum. The tracks, including demos from her acclaimed Lemonade album, were then widely shared across the internet. Judge Margaret Hale told the court the theft was “cynical and calculated,” motivated by the desire for notoriety within fan communities rather than financial gain.
Yet as the defendant was led away to begin his sentence, musicians and unions warned that the case distracts from a deeper injustice. The Music Workers Alliance, which represents session musicians, sound engineers and backup vocalists, said the industry’s focus on piracy misses the point when many working artists cannot afford rent.
“We are glad to see justice done for Beyoncé, but where is the justice for the session guitarist who was paid £50 for a chart-topping hit that generates millions in streaming revenue?” said spokesman James Okonkwo. “The real crime is the systemic exploitation of creative labour by platforms like Spotify and Apple Music. A jail sentence for one thief does not fix a broken system.”
Indeed, the case highlights the gulf between the haves and have-nots in music. Beyoncé, worth an estimated £400 million, employs a team of lawyers and cyber security experts. But the average professional musician in the UK earns just £23,000 a year, according to the Musicians’ Union. Many rely on zero-hour contracts and multiple gigs to make ends meet.
The convicted man’s motive was not money but status. He posted the songs on a private chat group where fans competed to leak rare material. It is a world away from the street-corner counterfeit sellers of old, but the effect on the artist is the same: loss of control over their work.
Record labels welcomed the sentence as a deterrent. The British Phonographic Industry called it “a strong message that stealing music in any form will not be tolerated.” But critics counter that the industry has been slow to adapt to the digital economy, relying on outdated copyright laws that fail to compensate creators fairly.
A study by the University of Westminster found that the average payout per stream on Spotify is £0.003. To earn the UK minimum wage, an artist would need over 2 million streams a month. Most never reach that figure. Meanwhile, the top 1% of artists take home 90% of all streaming revenue.
In the North, where the legacy of manufacturing decline still shapes the economy, musicians feel the squeeze hardest. Liverpool’s grassroots music venues have closed at twice the rate of London’s over the past decade. “We are losing the next Beatles not to piracy but to poverty,” said local promoter Maria Fonseca.
The Beyoncé case may be a win for copyright enforcement, but for the thousands of working musicians struggling to survive, it is a sideshow. Until the streaming giants pay a fair share, the music industry will remain a tale of two realities: one of superstars and private clouds, the other of empty practice rooms and final pay notices.








