List of Flash News about AI music licensing
| Time | Details |
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2025-12-03 22:00 |
Klay Vision Becomes First AI Music Platform to License Sony, Universal, and Warner Catalogs: Compliance-Focused Model With Per-Stream Royalties
According to DeepLearning.AI, Klay Vision became the first AI music company to secure licenses from all three major labels Sony, Universal, and Warner, source: DeepLearning.AI. Klay Vision will let users customize existing licensed recordings with rights holders compensated per stream, establishing a usage-based revenue-sharing model, source: DeepLearning.AI. This contrasts with Suno and Udio, which are facing lawsuits for training on copyrighted music without permission, highlighting legal risks for unlicensed AI generators, source: DeepLearning.AI and RIAA press release dated 2024-06-24. For traders evaluating AI music exposure across equities and digital assets, a licensed approach reduces litigation uncertainty relative to unlicensed peers and emphasizes monetization via per-stream royalties, source: RIAA 2024 lawsuits and DeepLearning.AI. |
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2025-11-19 14:39 |
Udio–UMG Settlement 2025: Paid AI Music Platform With Artist-Set Rules and In-Platform Sharing Only
According to @DeepLearningAI, Udio settled its lawsuit with Universal Music Group by agreeing to launch a paid AI music platform where fans can generate and remix tracks from UMG artists under artist-set rules, including controls over voice or style use and whether mashups are permitted. source: DeepLearning.AI. Artists will be paid for both training and each use of their assets, creating a defined licensing and royalty structure for generative AI music. source: DeepLearning.AI. Generated tracks can only be shared inside the platform with no external downloads or streaming allowed, limiting off-platform distribution. source: DeepLearning.AI. |
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2025-10-08 21:59 |
Sweden’s Music Rights Body Launches AI Training License Pilot With Attribution-Based Payouts: Trading Takeaways for AI and Digital Rights
According to @DeepLearningAI, Sweden’s performing rights society introduced a pilot license that lets AI developers train models on opted-in songs, creating a licensed pathway for music datasets in AI training, source: DeepLearning.AI on X, Oct 8, 2025, https://hubs.la/Q03MMRsV0. According to @DeepLearningAI, a startup’s attribution technology tracks each work’s influence on model outputs and compensates the original artists, enabling measurable usage-based payouts, source: DeepLearning.AI on X, Oct 8, 2025, https://hubs.la/Q03MMRsV0. According to @DeepLearningAI, traders focused on AI and digital rights can monitor adoption metrics such as number of works opted in, payout mechanics, and integration by model providers to gauge commercial traction of licensed AI music training, source: DeepLearning.AI on X, Oct 8, 2025, https://hubs.la/Q03MMRsV0. |