AI music startup Suno has admitted that its AI model998 Archivestrained on copyrighted music, but insists it's legally protected by the fair use doctrine.
On Thursday, Suno fleshed out this argument in a legal filing responding to a lawsuit from the Recording Industry Association of America on June 24. RIAA, which represents major record labels Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group, and Warner Music Group, is suing Suno and AI music company Udio for copyright infringement based on claims that they used music owned by the record labels to train their AI models.
In the generative AI era, numerous murky copyright battles have cropped up with no clear resolution. Media organizations like the New York Times Company have sued OpenAI and Microsoft alleging copyright theft. But AI companies claim their practice of using mass corpora of data scraped from the internet is fair use.
Suno had been vague about how it trained its AI music generator, despite damning note-for-note comparisons of RIAA copyrighted songs and Suno-generated songs included in the lawsuit. But now, Suno is claiming that this is perfectly legal according to fair use guidelines. "We train our models on medium- and high-quality music we can find on the open internet," said Suno CEO Mikey Schulman in a blog post accompanying the legal filing. "Much of the open internet indeed contains copyrighted materials, and some of it is owned by major record labels."
In response, RIAA posted a statement on X, saying "[Suno's] industrial scale infringement does not qualify as 'fair use.' There's nothing fair about stealing an artist's life's work, extracting its core value, and repackaging it to compete directly with the originals."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
According to the U.S. Copyright Office, fair use "promotes freedom of expression by permitting the unlicensed use of copyright-protected works in certain circumstances." Such circumstances include "criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research."
In the blog post, Schulman goes on to say Suno's neural networks learn "like a kid learning to write new rock songs by listening religiously to rock music," and therefore, "learning is not infringing." However equating synthetic intelligence to human intelligence is very much unresolved in the eyes of the law. Currently the Copyright Office says AI-generated art cannot be copyrighted, which pretty clearly distinguishes artificial intelligence from human intelligence when it comes to the final product. But the "learning process," i.e. training data is entirely new territory.
Suno's legal filing alleges the RIAA lawsuit is essentially a David and Goliath situation where major record labels are trying to stifle competition. "Where Suno sees musicians, teachers, and everyday people using a new tool to create original music, the labels see a threat to their market share," the filing said.
Mashable has reached out to Schulman for additional comments and will update if we hear back.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Music
A Brief History of the Snowball Fight by Sadie SteinWhat We’re Reading on Valentine’s DayA Downward Glissando by Clifford ChaseThe Morning Roundup for January 24, 2014The Morning Roundup for January 22, 2014Sadie Stein on the Museum of the City of New York’s exhibit “Gilded New York.”Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto Is One Weird GothicWhat We’re Loving: Foam, Florida, Fiction BingesThe Morning News Roundup for February 5, 2014Sleeping Beauty by Sadie SteinThe Morning News Roundup for January 30, 2014Common Language by Sadie SteinThe Paris Review and WikipediaDo Fathers Make Good Writers? Do Writers Make Good Fathers?I Hung Out at William Burroughs’s House When I Was NineteenJames Joyce’s modern heirs, the Hardy Boys’ strangest mysteries yet, and other newsBest streaming deal: Get three free months of Peacock PremiumIn 2014, Subscribe to the Paris Review and McSweeney'sThe Morning News Roundup for February 17, 2014Tonight: Rachel Kushner and James Wood by Dan Piepenbring Solawave Labor Day sale 2024 42 movies you'll want to see this fall Popyrin vs. Djokovic 2024 livestream: Watch US Open for free Wordle today: The answer and hints for September 1 How to unblock Redtube for free Amazon's 'Remarkable' Alexa will actually be Claude in disguise, report claims Apple Clean Up vs. Google Magic Eraser vs. Samsung Galaxy AI: Which one erases objects better? How to unblock Kick for free Boeing's Starliner was mysteriously blooping like a submarine in space. Here's why. What should you do with your reply guy? NYT Strands hints, answers for August 31 How to unblock X for free 'The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom' hands PlayStation shuts down 'Concord' two weeks after launch Wordle today: The answer and hints for August 30 GoPro's new HERO13 Black is all about the accessories Haddad Maia vs. Muchova 2024 livestream: Watch US Open for free 'Kaos': Billie Piper's character spoils the big twist in the first 5 minutes Newcastle United vs. Spurs 2024 livestream: Watch Premier League for free Stephen King has 3 words to describe Mike Flanagan's 'The Life of Chuck' adaptation
2.3665s , 10132.7265625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1998 Archives】,Steady Information Network