How will the Copyright Office rule when human and AI contributions are more intertwined in music?
Announced during a South by Southwest panel, the principles state that policymaking around the technology should keep "creators' interests" in mind.
As questions swirl about how artificial intelligence will impact the music business, the Copyright Office is trying to clarify how it will be treated under the law.
"The model right now really sucks when rain and white noise is eating into market share," says one exec at a distribution company.
The paradigm-shifting AI bot speaks on Rihanna’s half-time show, Beyoncé losing to Harry Styles, and even pretends (unsuccessfully) to know who Ice Spice is.
The streaming platform launched "DJ" for premium users in the U.S. and Canada
Artificial Intelligence is evolving faster than the courts can evaluate how laws apply to it.
From emerging challenges like artificial intelligence to new forms of piracy, it's more important than ever for all stakeholders in the business to present a united front.
Human musicians will inevitably lose jobs with the rising use of AI in music creation, says UNI and the Urchins bassist Charlotte Kemp Muhl.
Kuok Meng Ru says BandLab's goal is to empower artists and democratize music. One artist has even scored a Billboard Hot 100 hit with the platform.