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Home / Arts and Entertainment / AI Music Deals: Trust or Exploitation?

AI Music Deals: Trust or Exploitation?

14 Jan

•

Summary

  • Recent AI music licensing deals offer a false sense of resolution.
  • Artists demand transparency in AI training data and music usage.
  • Future success hinges on artists' trust, not just legal agreements.
AI Music Deals: Trust or Exploitation?

Recent settlements between AI music platforms and major labels are being presented as a definitive shift towards legitimacy. These agreements aim to move past unlicensed data scraping into an era of explicit permission. However, this "opt-in" licensing framework is proving to be merely a starting point, not a complete solution.

The current deals primarily confirm permission but leave critical details unaddressed. Artists are concerned about what specific music is used for training, how their work appears in AI outputs, and whether they receive equitable payment. The lack of robust tracking mechanisms for enforcing agreements, as seen in the Jorja Smith case, highlights a significant trust deficit.

Moving forward, artist trust is essential, particularly with younger generations who actively engage with music. True industry leadership will come from platforms that treat artists as collaborators, not just data sources. This involves implementing standard practices like stem-level attribution, meaningful creative controls for artists, and transparent reporting on music usage, ensuring a fair and collaborative future for AI in music.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Recent agreements focus on 'opt-in' licensing, moving from unlicensed scraping to seeking permission for music use in AI training and generation.
Artists worry about transparency in training data, how their music is used, and fair compensation, as current deals leave many questions unanswered.
Artists seek stem-level attribution, meaningful creative controls over their work's usage, and transparent reporting to ensure fair partnership.

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