Aug. 2 (Portaltic/EP) –
The startup Suno AI believes that the format it uses to train its Artificial Intelligence (AI) models, which uses copyrighted songs, is carried out in a fair, legitimate manner and with the aim of encouraging users to learn from them, not copy them.
Suno AI is a platform specialized in music generation and text-to-music conversion. It is free to use, although you need to register with an Apple, Discord, Google or Windows account or use a phone number.
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), which includes Universal Music Group Recordings, Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Records, sued both Suno AI and Udio, which offers a similar service, for train their models with original copyrighted material.
The association then said that these services frustrated “the promise of genuinely innovative AI” by considering it “fair” to copy an artist’s work and exploit it for their own benefit. And not only that: the aforementioned record labels, as well as Atlantic and Capitol Records, targeted these platforms. used these recordings without their explicit permission copyrighted.
Now, Sumo AI has answered on demand from the RIAA, a response in which it admitted to having trained its generative AI tool with different types of recordings available through public sources.
In this regard, they claim that their tool employs a “fair” back-end procedure, “invisible to the public, in the service of creating a new product that ultimately does not infringe” copyright. “This is legitimate,” have pointed out in this response.
For his part, Suno AI CEO and co-founder Mikely Shulman has published his opinion on the case in the blog of the firm, where it has recognized that the “new ways to create, listen to and experience music“They see it as a threat to their business.”
“Every time there has been an innovation in music, the record labels have tried to limit progress,” he said, insisting that these “They have spent decades trying to control“the way music is created and enjoyed.
Accusing the major labels of having “misconceptions” about how their technology works, he said that “Suno helps people create music through a process similar to the one humans have always used: learning styles, patterns and shapes” and then “invent new music from them”“.
He also said that the platform trains its models with music available on the internet, as does Google’s Gemini, Microsoft’s Copilot, Anthropic’s Claude, OpenAI’s ChatGPT “and even Apple’s new Apple Intelligence.”
Acknowledging that much of the open internet contains copyrighted material, some of it owned by record labels, he said his job was not to copy it but to learn from it. “It is not an infraction, it never has been and it is not now,” has qualified.
Shulman also expressed surprise at the RIAA’s lawsuit, since at the time of filing it Suno was “in productive discussions with several of the organization’s major member record labels” to Finding ways to expand together “the cake of music”.
He stressed that the platform is designed to create original music, not for users who “try to recreate an existing song that can be heard elsewhere on the Internet for free.” He also pointed out that it has “a lot of controls” intended to encourage user originality and avoid plagiarism.
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