Google and Universal Music might license artists' voices for AI

新闻中心 2024-09-23 23:22:23 229

Google and Universal Music Group (UMG) are reportedly working on a partnership to license artists' voices for AI-generated music.

According to the Financial Times, an agreement is in the works where Google would pay the record label giant licensing fees so that users can use AI to generate new songs with musicians' voices and melodies. The discussion is in its early stages, but "the goal is to develop a tool for fans to create these track legitimately, and pay the owners of the copyrights for it," said the FT, adding that artists would have "the choice to opt in." The FTsaid Warner Music is also in talks with Google about an AI music tool.

SEE ALSO:This fake song from Drake and The Weeknd is AI-generated and scary good

The rise of audio deepfakes in conjunction with generative AI has raised concerns within the music industry about ownership and reputational harm. Earlier this year a convincing deepfake of an AI-generated song with Drake and The Weeknd went viral for recreating their voices and musical style without their consent. The song was soon pulled from streaming platforms like YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Music for copyright infringement. At the time, UMG, which represents Drake, condemned the deepfake in a statement to Billboard saying such songs "demonstrate why platforms have a fundamental legal and ethical responsibility to prevent the use of their services in ways that harm artists."

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

Now, it seems UMG is working on a way to legally permit the use of its artists' livelihood. But questions remain about how such an agreement would protect their reputation and whether artists would profit from licensing revenue. Drake and other musicians have spoken out against the use of AI to recreate their voices. But some musicians, like Grimes are embracing the use of generative AI as a way to collaborate with fans, by allowing people to use her voice and split the royalties.


Related Stories
  • Meta launches AudioCraft, an open-source AI music generator
  • AI musicians are coming soon to your Spotify playlists
  • Bizarre AI proposal from studios helps explain SAG strike

Such licensing agreements would resolve the legal issue of AI-generated songs, but that still leaves the murky ethical issue that is becoming increasingly untenable in entertainment industries. Author Jane Friedman recently discovered several books falsely written under her name on Amazon that are believed to be AI-generated. The ongoing SAG-AFTRA strike was partly triggered by a proposal from studios to use AI-generated likenesses of background actors.

TopicsArtificial IntelligenceMusic

本文地址:http://o.zzzogryeb.bond/html/16e899475.html
版权声明

本文仅代表作者观点,不代表本站立场。
本文系作者授权发表,未经许可,不得转载。

全站热门

Scientists detect water sloshing on Mars. There could be a lot.

'Deal with your own human rights issues': North Korea bristles at EU over UN resolution

France hoping captain Kylian can deliver against Spain in Euro 2024 semi

A nuclear war with North Korea could alter Earth's climate for years.

海丰芥蓝入选全国名特优新农产品名录

PCB dismisses Abdul Razzaq and Wahab Riaz from selection committee roles

Controversial decision sparks petition for Euro 2024 quarter

The first 'Aladdin' set photo is here to wreck you emotionally

友情链接