Over a thousand musicians, including artists like Kate Bush and Damon Albarn, are releasing a silent album (called Is This What We Want?) in protest against proposed UK copyright changes related to artificial intelligence, a change which would leave artist's work open to be used (and abused) without their permission. All profits from the album will go to the charity Help Musicians.
Noted, 11 Mar 2025, 19:13Tag: ai
Chris Dalla Riva asks Who Owns AI-Generated Music? I Asked People That Make It. He discusses the legal complexities surrounding AI-generated music, particularly focusing on the startup Suno, which creates music based on user prompts. Users of Suno believe they own the music they generate, despite concerns from music labels about copyright issues related to the AI's training data. There is a call for clearer copyright laws to address ownership and compensation in the evolving landscape of AI-generated music.
Noted, 22 Nov 2024, 14:43"Listen to the AI-Generated Ripoff Songs That Got Udio and Suno Sued" - AI has a way to go yet
Noted, 01 Jul 2024, 08:24What the RIAA lawsuits mean for AI and copyright - the RIAA versus AI, explained
Noted, 27 Jun 2024, 11:28Unsound Dispatch: 13 Ways of Looking at AI, Art & Music by Jennifer Walshe
Noted, 21 Dec 2023, 18:45Massive list of electronic tools for music, via Drowned in Sound newsletter
Noted, 25 Mar 2023, 16:20Why Trance works - using artificial intelligence to understand what it is about Trance that fans love so much
Noted, 01 Dec 2020, 14:06Round up
Recent happenings on the packed streets of electronic music