These are all legal questions that are by no means clear. Suno ishttps://suno-ai.notion.site/FAQs-b72601 ... 11c73ade77
Suno claims that If you are a paying subscriber then you "own" the songs you generate.
While at the same time Suno has no guarantee that the songs generated using Suno are subject to "copyright" protection
simply deciding this for itself - but for the first model lawsuits, Suno
would have to show which songs the AI learned from. Because every
neural network needs a lot of learning data. In other words, songs that
Suno can learn from.
I assume that the major companies will file a lawsuit. The legal"AI-generated" means: pieced together from the vastness of the
internet. The AI looks for all possible puzzle pieces and set pieces -
and puts them back together again according to a learned algorithm
(neural network). In other words, the AI ultimately regurgitates what has
already been there. One could object here that every human musician
actually does this too.
dispute will be very exciting.
Look here:
When you enter 'beminem' into Suno as a prompt, says Ed Newton-
Rex, it produces music that's strikingly similar to that of superstar
Eminem.
Look here and here.Newton-Rex, a classically trained composer, has tested the platform
extensively and found numerous examples in which the songs
generated by Suno are strikingly similar to well-known hits in terms
of style, melody, harmony or instrumentation.
Suno blocks AI prompts with artist names. However, small spelling
mistakes in the prompt are enough to outsmart the system. One song
was conspicuously created with the lyrics of Abba's Dancing Queen
and "70s Pop" as the prompt.
So, the last word has not yet been spoken here.
In the long run, however, other platforms will emerge similar to Suno -
and ultimately shake up the entire music world.
Statistics: Posted by enroe — Mon Jun 03, 2024 6:50 am