The Music Business Will Never Learn

Photo by Hitesh Choudhary on Unsplash
Photo by Hitesh Choudhary on Unsplash

It seems history is repeating itself. Remember when the RIAA thought it was a great idea to sue music lovers who used Napster? Well, now they are at it again. It may be a synthetic singer, but it’s an old song. Here’s the refrain.

A viral AI-generated song mimicking Drake and The Weeknd’s vocals, titled “Heart on My Sleeve,” has been removed from multiple streaming platforms – including Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, Amazon, SoundCloud, Tidal, Deezer, and TikTok – following a complaint from Universal Music Group (UMG). The song was streamed 15 million times on TikTok and attracted 600,000 plays on Spotify and 275,000 views on YouTube before being taken down.

UMG claimed that using their artists’ music to train generative AI constituted “a breach of our agreements and a violation of copyright law,” adding that platforms had a “legal and ethical responsibility” to prevent harmful uses of their services. However, it remains unclear whether traditional copyright law applies in this case, as the song in question was not written or sung by the artists. This incident marks the beginning of a complex conflict between the enthusiasm for AI in pop culture and the efforts to protect copyright.


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Disclosure: This is not a sponsored post. I am the author of this article and it expresses my own opinions. I am not, nor is my company, receiving compensation for it.

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