The Sun (Malaysia)

Major music labels sue AI startups

Suno and Udio accused of violating copyrights of artists

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Some of the world’s major music labels are suing music generation services Suno and Udio, accusing the startups of violating the copyrights of top artists to train their generative AI engines without permission.

Sony Music Entertainm­ent, Warner Records, Capitol Records and others – who filed the copyright infringeme­nt suits on Monday in federal courts in Boston and New York – are seeking damages of up to US$150,000 (RM707,000) per song or shares of the companies’ profits.

“Unlicenced services like Suno and Udio that claim it’s ‘fair’ to copy an artist’s life’s work and exploit it for their own profit without consent or pay set back the promise of genuinely innovative AI for us all,” Recording Industry Associatio­n of America (RIAA) chief executive Mitch Glazier said in a statement.

Examples cited in the lawsuits included prompts using Suno’s service to churn out songs mimicking copyrighte­d works of Chuck Berry, James Brown, Michael Buble, ABBA and others.

Suno and Udio did not respond to requests for comment.

Breaching ownership rights of people’s artistic creations to train generative AI models has been a flashpoint as the technology races to become more capable and, ultimately, more profitable.

The two lawsuits, one against each company, centre on generative AI services that allow people to make songs using basic prompts.

Suno and Udio have been evasive about how they train their AI models, saying that is a guarded secret, according to the complaints.

Music publishers are collaborat­ing with “responsibl­e developers” to build AI tools that respect the works of artists, according to the head of the RIAA, which announced the lawsuits.

“Real music comes from real life and real people,” Black Music Action Coalition CEO Willie “Prophet” Stiggers said in the release.

“It is vital that artists and songwriter­s are in charge of their own work, story, and message.”

In April, hundreds of artists and songwriter­s including Billie Eilish, Smokey Robinson and the estate of Frank Sinatra signed an open letter urging protection­s against what they called an “assault on human creativity” posed by AI.

“We must protect against the predatory use of AI to steal profession­al artists’ voices and likenesses, violate creators’ rights, and destroy the music ecosystem,” read the letter, submitted by the non-profit Artist Rights Alliance.

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