2024-08-02 19:55:08
Music
Technology
Artificial Intelligence

AI Music Startups Battle Lawsuit Over Copyright Infringement

Suno, an AI music startup, is fighting back against a lawsuit from major labels who claim their AI has infringed copyrights. Founder Mikey Shulman denies the allegations, stating that their AI learns music patterns rather than copying, and sees the lawsuit as an attempt to stifle innovation.

Rival company, Udio, also claims that learning from data is fair use. Suno has had productive discussions with labels to expand the industry, but a ruling is still pending.

Other AI companies, like Google, make similar fair use arguments. Udio recently unveiled a model that can generate recordings almost indistinguishable from human-made music.

The RIAA, however, argues that Suno and Udio failed to obtain consent for their AI-generated content unlike platforms like YouTube. Microsoft AI boss Mustafa Suleyman has also previously made incorrect claims about open web content being 'freeware'.

THE DECODER
2. August 2024 um 17:22

AI music startup Suno fights back against lawsuit, says 'learning is not infringing'

Technology
Economy
Suno is battling a lawsuit from major labels over claims their AI infringed copyrights. Founder Mikey Shulman denies this, arguing their AI learns music patterns, not copies, and sees the lawsuit as an attempt to stifle innovation, like past reactions to drum machines, remixes, MP3s, and streaming. Rival Udio also claims learning from data is fair use. Shulman says Suno had productive discussions with labels to expand the industry. Google and others make similar fair use arguments, though a ru..
The Verge
2. August 2024 um 12:24

AI music startups say copyright violation is just rock and roll

Technology
Economy
Suno and Udio's fair use claims echo those of other AI companies, though the RIAA says they failed to obtain consent unlike services like YouTube. Microsoft AI boss Mustafa Suleyman previously made incorrect claims about open web content being "freeware".
Webrazzi
2. August 2024 um 14:30

Suno Argued That Copying Songs From the Internet to Train Models Is Fair Use

Technology
Economy
Record companies and AI companies sued Suno and Udio for copyright infringement. Suno admitted to using copyrighted songs to train its models, but argued that this falls under fair use. The RIAA interpreted Suno's statement as an admission of the facts and stated that the rights of the artists were being stolen.
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