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Sessions’ allows users to manipulate song structures by moving, extending or replacing sections within tracks.
Country artist Tony Justice has fired off class actions against Suno and Udio, accusing the AI music startups of training on ...
An AI class action lawsuit was filed against Udio by a singer, Tony Justice, who is suing the AI music startup on behalf of indie artists.
Sony Music CEO Rob Stringer said that AI music product deals are coming in 2025 amid the major labels' licensing talks with ...
Justice is accusing the AI companies of using recordings and works from “thousands of class members” without authorization to train their AI models.
U niversal Music Group, Warner Music Group, and Sony Music Entertainment are in talks to license their work to AI startups Udio and Suno, according to a new report from Bloomberg.
Growth of AI music poses competition for human artists on streaming platforms. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at ...
A musician has sued Suno and Udio, filing a class action lawsuit against the AI companies that seeks to represent all indie artists in the US. Although the majors are already suing both start-ups, Ant ...
AI music is suddenly in a make-or-break moment. On June 24, Suno and Udio, two leading AI music startups that make tools to generate complete songs from a prompt in seconds, were sued by major ...
Both Udio and Suno are fairly new, but they’ve already made a big splash. Suno was launched in December by a Cambridge-based team that previously worked for Kensho, another AI company.
Suno and Udio said the use of copyrighted sound recordings to train their systems qualifies as fair use under U.S. copyright law, and they called the lawsuits attempts to stifle independent ...
Last week, The New York Times announced a new AI licensing deal with Amazon. Now, the same strategy may be coming for the music industry. Bloomberg reports that Universal Music Group, Warner Music ...