The music industry is suing 2 hot AI startups. They’ve invoked Taylor Swift in their defense

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The music industry is coming after two AI music startups, Suno and Udio, with both barrels over the companies' generative AI music software.

When the buzzy music startup Suno first launched its AI-based music-creation tool a few months ago -- one that allows users to turn simple text prompts into highly-polished, professional songs -- I was one of the many users right away who had a field day with it. Among my early audio creations, for example, was a banger of a reggaeton track that I sent to BGR's editor-in-chief; appropriately, Suno titled it 'Suave CEO.

Because the startup not only fired back by acknowledging having trained its AI model on copyrighted music -- it argues that doing so was totally legal under fair-use doctrine, in addition to pointing to Taylor Swift in its defense. The Swift defense, as I understand it, is this: Suno comes right out and embraces the fight that it used copyrighted music to train its AI tool -- and users, in turn, are creating entirely new and non-infringing music with that tool.

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