UMG, which controls about a third of the global music
market, has become increasingly concerned about AI bots using their songs to
train themselves to churn out music that sounds like popular artists.
AI-generated songs have been popping up on streaming
services, and UMG has been sending takedown requests “left and right,” said a
person familiar with the matter. The company is asking streaming companies to
cut off access to their music catalog for developers using it to train AI
technology.
“We will not hesitate to take steps to protect our rights
and those of our artists,” UMG wrote to online platforms in March, in emails
viewed by the FT.
“This next generation of technology poses significant
issues,” said a person close to the situation. “Much of [generative AI] is
trained on popular music. You could say: compose a song that has the lyrics to
be like Taylor Swift, but the vocals to be in the style of Bruno Mars, but I want
the theme to be more Harry Styles. The output you get is due to the fact the AI
has been trained on those artists’ intellectual property.”
On a YouTube page titled “PluggingAI,” for example, there
are tracks uploaded that sound like Kanye West singing songs by The Weeknd or
SZA. The website drayk.it allowed users to enter a prompt and receive a clip
that sounded like a custom Drake song. It was shut down a few months ago.
The largest recent innovation in this area is MusicLM,
developed by Google, which generates music from any text description. MusicLM
was trained from a data set of 280,000 hours of music, according to a research
paper.
But Google has not released the product, after its
researchers found a “risk of potential misappropriation of creative content.”
The researchers found that about 1 percent of the music it generated was a
direct replica of copyrighted work and concluded that more work is needed to
“tackle these risks” before releasing MusicLM.
UMG, home to artists spanning Swift, Elton John, and The
Weeknd, has been waging an effort to clear out “lower-quality” songs from
streaming platforms, including ambient music and AI-generated songs.
It told streaming services last month: “We have become aware
that certain AI systems might have been trained on copyrighted content without
obtaining the required consents from, or paying compensation to, the
rightsholders who own or produce the content.”
A UMG spokesperson told the FT: “We have a moral and
commercial responsibility to our artists to work to prevent the unauthorized
use of their music and to stop platforms from ingesting content that violates
the rights of artists and other creators. We expect our platform partners will
want to prevent their services from being used in ways that harm artists.”
Spotify declined to comment. Apple did not respond to a
request for comment.