While the first copyright rulings have come out on the side of AI platforms, this is hardly a death knell for the music giants’ lawsuits against Suno, Udio and Anthropic, legal experts say.
Various controversies have led to the sort of massive media attention and sizable streaming gains that elude most artists.
In a keynote at the UN's AI for Good summit, Michael Nash discussed market-based solutions to AI issues, copyright and current collaborations.
The passage of the bill, which allows musicians to deduct recording costs in the year they were incurred, was hailed by Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason jr.
Andrew Frelon, who calls himself an "adjunct" member of the group, owned up to using Suno for the project but gave conflicting answers about how much the service was relied upon.
The group have racked up the huge number of streams, despite existing for less than a month The po
The annual general assembly of CISAC, the trade organization of collecting societies, was full of talk about new technology — and how it could help creators, as well as hurt them.
The streamer's chief innovation officer and director of research talk about AI-generated spam, its new tagging system and more.
The project is aiming to remaster 100 martial arts films The post