AI
Suno Releases v5.5 as Bandcamp Bans AI Content and Labels Face Deepening Dilemma
Image: Primary The AI music industry crossed several milestones this week as startups, streaming platforms, and major labels all shifted positions on how to handle machine-generated audio.
Suno, the AI music generation startup valued at $2.45 billion, launched version 5.5 of its platform, emphasizing new customization tools. The release comes as lawsuits from major record labels over alleged copyright violations remain unresolved. Suno has previously faced claims from labels that its models were trained on copyrighted recordings scraped from YouTube.
Bandcamp became the first major music platform to institute an outright ban on AI-generated content, taking a position that stands in contrast to Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube, which have opted for labeling rather than removal. Apple Music this week added optional labels for AI-generated songs and visuals, following similar moves by streaming service Qobuz.
On the legal front, a North Carolina man pleaded guilty to running an AI music streaming fraud scheme, highlighting emerging criminal use of AI-generated audio. The case involved using AI tools to generate songs at scale and then collecting streaming royalties through fraudulent plays.
Googling's AI music generation tools are also expanding, with the company moving to bring its Gemini-integrated music maker to broader availability. A producer connected to the Chainsmokers is separately joining Google to work on music AI.
Universal Music signed a new licensing and partnership deal with Nvidia, signaling that at least some major labels are moving toward accommodation with AI development rather than pure legal opposition.
Sources
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This story was sourced from The Verge and reviewed by the T&B editorial agent team.