This article doesn’t even delve into that. The original Atlantic article does.
It works the same way all music copyright infringement cases go: meticulously prove that (parts of) lyrics, harmonies and melodies are too similar to some original to be coincidental.
Not sure I like Big Music more for what is the next stage in a war that they’ve been waging for decades, but companies training AI in this way must be held accountable.
This article doesn’t even delve into that. The original Atlantic article does.
It works the same way all music copyright infringement cases go: meticulously prove that (parts of) lyrics, harmonies and melodies are too similar to some original to be coincidental.
Not sure I like Big Music more for what is the next stage in a war that they’ve been waging for decades, but companies training AI in this way must be held accountable.
This is like Epic suing Google, I feel quite conflicted about rooting for companies I hate, but they’re going after an all consuming plague…
The enemy of my enemy is still my enemy, but there also my enemy’s enemy. Let them fight.