Omerta Music Research LTD operates as a premium legal entity specializing in master rights acquisition, sterile supply chain management, and global anti-piracy enforcement.
Youssef Safi directs the global strategy of Omerta Music Research LTD. Operating from Casablanca and London, he oversees the acquisition of high-value catalogs and enforces strict copyright compliance across all major DSPs.
Under his leadership, the company has established a zero-tolerance policy towards copyright infringement, utilizing advanced takedown protocols to protect exclusive assets.
We acquire, manage, and protect exclusive master recordings. Our catalog includes high-value assets from Cheb Rezki, Mazarii, Doctor Yusuf Safi, and Belf You. Every asset is legally secured under UK jurisdiction.
A dedicated division executing swift DMCA takedowns and Cease & Desist orders. We maintain a sterile supply chain by aggressively auditing and removing unauthorized distributions on platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube.
Omerta Music Research LTD operates as a music rights restructuring holding company. The mandate is to consolidate premium MENA cultural assets — both legacy and contemporary — under a transparent, UK-governed legal structure, and to convert these assets into compliant, audit-ready intellectual property instruments suitable for institutional-grade global digital distribution.
The company does not operate as a conventional record label. It is a holding entity whose function is the acquisition, sanitization, and unified management of master recording catalogs that have, for too long, been held in opaque or under-performing structures.
The company operates across three structural pillars:
1. Strategic IP Acquisition. Identification, due diligence, and acquisition of master recording catalogs whose original chain of title is verifiable and whose commercial exploitation has been historically obstructed by financial opacity, contractual ambiguity, or distribution-chain inefficiency. Each acquisition is finalised as an irrevocable deed of assignment under English law.
2. Financial Sanitization. Forensic audit of historical revenue streams across all major Digital Service Providers (Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, Deezer, Tidal, Amazon Music, Anghami, Audiomack), reconciliation of unpaid royalties, and termination of legacy distribution agreements that fail to meet contemporary transparency standards.
3. Supply-Chain Restructuring. Re-onboarding of acquired catalogs to global DSPs through a unified, auditable supply chain operated directly by the LTD. Single point of metadata authority. Single point of revenue collection. Single point of legal enforcement.
Incorporation in England and Wales is a deliberate structural choice. English contract law provides the most internationally recognised framework for cross-border music intellectual property: deeds of assignment under English law are honoured by every major DSP, the courts of London offer specialised IP enforcement chambers, and the UK Companies House public registry guarantees corporate transparency at a level no opaque local structure can match.
For MENA legacy catalogs that have, for decades, been managed under structures lacking institutional credibility, English jurisdiction provides the legitimacy required to access global distribution at scale.
The company is incorporated under Companies Act 2006 with a single Director, Persons with Significant Control on public record, and statutory filing obligations to Companies House. All acquisition deeds, takedown notices, and distribution agreements are governed by the laws of England and Wales with exclusive jurisdiction granted to the courts of London.
The company operates a publicly stated zero-tolerance policy regarding the unauthorized distribution, monetization, or exploitation of any asset within its catalog. Distributors, aggregators, and platforms that fail to honour valid takedown notices issued by the LTD's compliance division will be subject to escalation through the legal frameworks available under the DMCA (United States), the EU Copyright Directive 2019/790, and the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
The company further reserves the right to pursue financial recovery for withheld royalties generated by unauthorized exploitation, including punitive damages where statutorily available.