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Tag: warner music group

  • Warner Music drops lawsuit against AI music platform Suno in exchange for licensing agreement

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    Following its licensing deal with Udio, Warner Music Group (WMG) has also reached an agreement with Suno that will let the platform license its artists’ music and likenesses, and end the music company’s ongoing litigation. WMG was previously one of several record labels suing Udio and Suno for allegedly infringing on copyrighted works at a “massive scale.”

    As part of the agreement, “artists and songwriters will have full control over whether and how their names, images, likenesses, voices, and compositions are used in new AI-generated music,” WMG explains in its press release for the announcement. WMG doesn’t spell out how that will work for musicians impacted by the deal, but it does appear that participation will be opt-in, rather than anything being shared by default. This mirrors the opt-in structure of the company’s Udio deal.

    “AI becomes pro-artist when it adheres to our principles: committing to licensed models, reflecting the value of music on and off platform, and providing artists and songwriters with an opt-in for the use of their name, image, likeness, voice and compositions in new AI songs,” WMG CEO Robert Kyncl says.

    Suno will also make adjustments to its AI music platform, possibly as a condition of the new partnership. WMG says Suno is launching “new, more advanced and licensed models” in 2026, after which its current models will be deprecated. The company will also limit music downloads to paid accounts. “In the future, songs made on the free tier will not be downloadable and will instead be playable and shareable. Paid tier users will have limited monthly download caps with the ability to pay for more downloads,” WMG says.

    In an odd wrinkle to the partnership, Suno is also acquiring WMG’s Songkick concert discovery platform. The company plans to continue running it, and WMG claims that “the combination of Suno and Songkick will create new potential to deepen the artist-fan connection.” An app for finding nearby concerts doesn’t totally square with Suno’s existing music creation tools, but maybe it suggests the company is interested in offering more social features down the road.

    Prior to this agreement, Suno openly admitted to using “essentially all music files of reasonable quality that are accessible on the open internet” to train its AI model, under the auspices of fair use. That seems like a pretty blatant admission of copyright infringement, but apparently Warner Music Group is happier with the deals it struck than what it could have won through its lawsuit. The company is reportedly one of several music groups looking to strike a similar deal with YouTube.

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    Ian Carlos Campbell

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  • Warner signs AI music licensing deal with Udio

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    Warner Music Group (WMG) settled a lawsuit with an AI company in exchange for a piece of the action. The label announced on Wednesday that it had resolved a 2024 lawsuit against AI music creation platform Udio. As part of the deal, Udio gets to license Warner’s catalog for an upcoming music creation service. This follows a similar settlement between Universal Music Group and Udio, announced last month.

    Udio’s service will allow subscribers to create, listen to and discover AI-generated music trained on licensed work. You’ll be able to generate new songs, remixes and covers using favorite artists’ voices or compositions. The boundaries between human creation and an algorithm’s approximation of it are about to grow murkier. Not in terms of artistic quality, but it will be based on what proliferates online.

    WMG is framing the deal as a win for artists, who will — if they choose to opt in — gain a new revenue stream. Ahead of the service’s launch, Udio will roll out “expanded protections and other measures designed to safeguard the rights of artists and songwriters.”

    So, the settlement does at least appear to reassert some control over artists’ work. What the normalization of robot-made music will do for society’s collective tastes is another question.

    A neon sign on a wall, reading, “You are what you listen to.” (Mohammad Metri / Unsplash)

    The settlement echoes a warning Spotify sounded to musicians and labels last month. “If the music industry doesn’t lead in this moment, AI-powered innovation will happen elsewhere, without rights, consent or compensation,” the company wrote. Spotify plans to launch “artist-first AI music products” in the future, a vague promise to be sure. However, given Udio’s plans, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the streaming service cooking up a similar licensed AI music-creation product.

    “We’re unwaveringly committed to the protection of the rights of our artists and songwriters, and Udio has taken meaningful steps to ensure that the music on its service will be authorized and licensed,” Warner Music CEO Robert Kyncl wrote in a press release. “This collaboration aligns with our broader efforts to responsibly unlock AI’s potential – fueling new creative and commercial possibilities while continuing to deliver innovative experiences for fans.”

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  • All 3 Major Labels Are Suing AI Start-ups for Copyright Infringement

    All 3 Major Labels Are Suing AI Start-ups for Copyright Infringement

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    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Suno, Udio

    The recording industry’s three major label groups are uniting in their fight against artificial intelligence. Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, and Warner Music Group are suing Suno and Udio, two AI start-ups, for copyright infringement. The labels, aided by the Recording Industry Association of America, claim the firms have engaged in “willful copyright infringement at an almost unimaginable scale” by copying their music to train AI on it. Both Suno and Udio use AI to generate songs from users’ text prompts. In responses filed August 1, both Suno and Udio admitted their models trained on copyrighted songs, but claimed that training was legal under fair use. The RIAA called their admissions “a major concession of facts they spent months trying to hide and acknowledged only when forced by a lawsuit.”

    The labels are seeking both an injunction to stop the companies from training on their music and damages for the songs they have trained on. The lawsuits argue that by flouting copyright, Suno and Udio “threaten enduring and irreparable harm to recording artists, record labels, and the music industry, inevitably reducing the quality of new music available to consumers and diminishing our shared culture.” Below, the latest response and everything we know so far.

    The subject of the labels’ lawsuits are two of the biggest names in AI music creation. Both models allow users to generate songs based on prompts, like “a jazz song about New York,” as Udio suggests in its guide. The models can make songs in a number of genres, either using lyrics written by the user or generated by AI. Suno was released in December 2023 with a Microsoft partnership, and recently announced a $125 million round of funding in May. Udio was released on April 10 and counts musicians will.i.am, Common, and Tay Keith among its investors. “BBL Drizzy,” the viral song that Metro Boomin flipped into a beat during Kendrick Lamar and Drake’s beef, was created with Udio.

    In very similar lawsuits, the labels allege that Suno and Udio infringed on their copyright by training AI models on the labels’ libraries, which constitute a large chunk of all recorded pop music. “This process involved copying decades worth of the world’s most popular sound recordings and then ingesting those copies [to] generate outputs that imitate the qualities of genuine human sound recordings,” the lawyers claim. The lawsuits say “it is obvious” that Suno and Udio trained on the labels’ libraries and that when tested, both services were able to imitate copyrighted recordings. Specifically, lawyers allege Udio could imitate artists including Bruce Springsteen, Michael Jackson, ABBA, and Lin-Manuel Miranda when given the right prompts, while Suno generated songs imitating the tags for Jason Derulo and producer CashMoneyAP.

    Per the lawsuits, both Suno and Udio claimed “fair use” of the copyrighted music in previous correspondence — which other AI companies like OpenAI have also claimed in their AI training. The doctrine of fair use generally allows copyrighted material to be used without permission for academic, journalistic, and parody purposes. But the lawyers argue Suno and Udio’s training does not fall under that doctrine because it is “imitative machine-generated music — not human creativity or expression,” and thus, it’s use that Suno and Udio needed permission for.

    Suno and Udio have never specified what music their AI models trained on. Antonio Rodriguez, an early Suno investor, told Rolling Stone in March that Suno did not have licenses for the music it trained on, admitting a degree of legal risk. “Honestly, if we had deals with labels when this company got started, I probably wouldn’t have invested in it,” Rodriguez said. “I think that they needed to make this product without the constraints.” Udio’s co-founder, David Ding, told Billboard in May that his company’s AI trained “on publicly available data that we obtained from the internet,” adding it was “good music.”

    Suno admitted that its AI model trained on copyrighted music in a response filed on August 1. However, the company claimed that was legal under fair use. “It is no secret that the tens of millions of recordings that Suno’s model was trained on presumably included recordings whose rights are owned by the Plaintiffs in this case,” Suno’s lawyers wrote, per Rolling Stone. Specifically, Suno argued it was legal to make copies of the labels’ songs for “a back-end technological process,” like AI training, when consumers would not interact with the actual song copies.

    “The outputs generated by Suno are new sounds, informed precisely by the ‘styles, arrangements and tones’ of previous ones,” Suno’s lawyers said. “They are per se lawful.” Suno reiterated these points in a public blog post also published on August 1, claiming major labels see its AI “as a threat to their business.” In the post, Suno also claimed prior to the suit the company was “having productive discussions” with labels “to find ways of expanding the pie for music together.”

    Suno CEO Mikey Shulman previously claimed in a statement that Suno does not allow users to copy music. “Our technology is transformative; it is designed to generate completely new outputs, not to memorize and regurgitate pre-existing content,” Shulman told Billboard. “That is why we don’t allow user prompts that reference specific artists.”

    Similar to Suno, Udio also admitted to training its AI on copyrighted songs in its legal response, per Reuters, on August 1. “What Udio has done — use existing sound recordings as data to mine and analyze for the purpose of identifying patterns in the sounds of various musical styles, all to enable people to make their own new creations — is a quintessential ‘fair use,’” its lawyers wrote. Udio additionally reiterated the “back-end technological process” argument. Udio further characterized the labels’ lawsuit as an “anticompetitive” action.

    Following the initial filing, a representative for Udio directed Vulture to a blog post titled “AI and the Future of Music” that did not directly address the lawsuit. “Just as students listen to music and study scores, our model has ‘listened’ to and learned from a large collection of recorded music,” Udio said. The “musical ideas” its AI model learned, the company added, “are owned by no one,” and its model is focused on creating “new” music. “We are completely uninterested in reproducing content in our training set, and in fact, have implemented and continue to refine state-of-the-art filters to ensure our model does not reproduce copyrighted works or artists’ voices,” Udio continued. An RIAA spokesperson said Udio made “a startling admission of illegal and unethical conduct” by saying its model trained on recorded music, “and they should be held accountable.”

    The lawsuits make three specific requests. First, they are asking Suno and Udio to admit their AI models trained on their libraries of music. Second, they want injunctions to stop that alleged training. And last, they are seeking damages of up to $150,000 per song — which could quickly add up to nine figures or more. The lawsuits argue the damages match the companies’ “massive and ongoing infringement.”

    These lawsuits are the biggest action taken yet against AI-generated music. It’s an especially loud and notable show of power for all three major labels to be working together on the lawsuits. Last year, Universal Music Group sued Anthropic PBC, another AI music company, for copyright infringement in a case that specifically focused on lyrics. But these lawsuits are bigger and broader and could have major implications for AI and the music business. They follow a concern that’s been percolating across the industry after UMG made AI-generated music a sticking point in their TikTok negotiations and a group of musicians spoke out against AI-generated music. Groups including the Recording Academy, the Music Workers Alliance, the National Association of Music Publishers, the American Association of Independent Music, and even SAG-AFTRA have all made statements supporting the lawsuits.

    RIAA’s chairman and CEO, Mitch Glazier, made clear in a statement that this fight is specifically against unauthorized AI. “The music community has embraced AI and we are already partnering and collaborating with responsible developers to build sustainable AI tools centered on human creativity that put artists and songwriters in charge,” he said. “But we can only succeed if developers are willing to work together with us. Unlicensed services like Suno and Udio that claim it’s ‘fair’ to copy an artist’s life’s work and exploit it for their own profit without consent or pay set back the promise of genuinely innovative AI for us all.”

    This post has been updated.

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    Justin Curto

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