News

AI-generated music is rapidly advancing with platforms like Udio and Sunno AI allowing users to create complete songs by ...
In an AI legal analysis, experts explain what court rulings around book copyrights mean for music lawsuits filed against Suno ...
Turns out copyright law in music is special — and the record labels are bringing out the big guns.
AI-generated bands like The Velvet Sundown are gaining massive popularity and revenue, raising concerns across the music ...
With AI tracks pouring onto streaming services in droves, Udio is now set to begin fingerprinting its users’ outputs under an Audible Magic tie-up. The involved parties reached out with word of ...
Udio has launched as an AI music generator, custom-generating music, lyrics, even vocals. It won't replace Radiohead, but it's incredibly fun to mess around with.
Udio partnered with Audible Magic to fingerprint all tracks made using the platform at the moment they are created and to check the generated works.
Move over, Stable Audio and Suno AI. Former Google researchers unleash Udio and what I heard is impressive.
We speak to Output CEO Gregg Lehrman about the company's AI-assisted digital crate-digger designed to speed up sample discovery ...
Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Suno and New York-based Udio have raised millions in funding this year for their AI systems, which create music in response to user text prompts.
Music labels' and publishers' cases pose novel questions, including whether the law should make exceptions for AI's use of copyrighted material to create something new.
Major labels Universal, Sony, and Warner are suing AI startups Suno and Udio for copyright infringement. Both companies admitted their model trained on copyrighted music in new filings.