ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus Talks AI Training at UN Summit: Artists ‘Deserve a Place at the Table’

ABBA member and CISAC president Björn Ulvaeus took the stage at the United Nations’ AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva on Monday (July 13) to ask a simple question: “Good for whom?” “Tracing the output was always the wrong question,” he said. “The right question is much simpler. It is about the training. Our works went in. We should be paid for what went in, not for every output that comes out the other end, but for the raw material that made the machine what it is.”

Source: ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus Talks AI Training at UNSummit: Artists ‘Deserve a Place at the Table’

Claude’s ability to remix ‘liquid content’ is ‘serious challenge for news media’

Media research expert Nic Newman has warned the ability of AI models to provide “liquid content” in different formats is a “really serious challenge” to news media. He gave the example of asking Claude questions relating to the UK heatwaves, including where the UK stands in terms of air conditioning compared to other countries and previous temperature records. Claude was able to produce information in a Q&A format, generate graphs which were filterable by different parts of the world, and show Met Office warnings.

Source: Claude’s ability to remix ‘liquid content’ is ‘serious challenge for news media’

Surprise: Many People Prefer AI Audiobooks, New Study Finds

A new Edison Research at SSRS study commissioned by Spoken, an AI audiobook company, revealed that the company’s multi-voice productions achieved a higher favorability rating than human-narrated productions. “There’s opinions good and bad for AI among the American consumer, right, so we wanted to just purely get the reaction,” Edison Research vice president Megan Lazovick said. “That was what was really fascinating, was the response that people were open to AI and thought it enhanced their experience.”

Source: Surprise: Many People Prefer AI Audiobooks, New Study Finds

Australia establishes AI office and vows to protect creatives from copyright ‘theft’

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has promised “the strongest possible protection” for Australian creatives against misuse of their work by artificial intelligence models, warning it would be “theft” if writers, artists and musicians didn’t have control of their work or receive payment for its use. “Let me make this crystal clear: not everything produced in Australia is up for grabs,” Albanese said on Wednesday. “Australian writers, musicians, artists and journalists must retain ownership and control of their work. Our laws will spell that out, plain as day.”

Source: Australia establishes AI office and vows to protect creatives from copyright ‘theft’

Band Wakes Up to Find AI Has Stolen 94% of Their Spotify Royalties

Musician Owen Lyman-Schmidt found out that his work had been stolen when a longtime fan of his band, Makeshift Hammer, messaged him to let him know an album on Spotify sounded as if someone had taken his music and “distorted it a bit.” They sent a link to an album called Blue Road by an artist named Carey Dupont. “I had never heard of Carey Dupont,” Lyman-Schmidt wrote. “Dupont had no other releases that I could find and was seemingly otherwise unknown to the internet.”

Source: Band Wakes Up to Find AI Has Stolen 94% of Their Spotify Royalties 

From Pillow Talk to Court Talk: Meta’s Adult Content Copyright Mess

The case, which alleges that Meta systematically pirated thousands of adult movies using BitTorrent to feed its AI models, offers critical insights into how courts are handling tech giants’ efforts to dodge AI-related copyright liabilities at the early pleading stage. According to the lawsuit, Strike 3 traced 47 distinct IP addresses directly belonging to Meta’s corporate network. Between 2018 and 2025, these IP addresses were allegedly used to torrent nearly 2,400 of Strike 3’s films over 6,000 times.

Source: From Pillow Talk to Court Talk: Meta’s Adult Content Copyright Mess

Streaming accelerates nostalgia-driven catalog discovery, says Vevo study

Streaming is accelerating how audiences discover and revisit nostalgic content, according to a new study from Vevo. Vevo‘s report finds that music videos trigger nostalgia more than any other music format. It also finds that 65% of Gen Z feel nostalgic for eras they were never alive to experience, something Vevo calls “borrowed nostalgia.”

Source: Streaming accelerates nostalgia-driven catalog discovery, says Vevo study

Artificial Intelligence Is Rewriting the Rules of Art Valuation

The use of artificial intelligence in the art world has been touted for its supposed ability to spot fakes and authenticate works by Old Masters, identify which emerging artists will become the next superstars and even create artworks without human involvement. It’s all very space age and largely niche. But behind the scenes in a rapidly changing art market, A.I. is already playing a significant role in price setting.

Source: Artificial Intelligence Is Rewriting the Rules of Art Valuation

CRB proposes extending physical and download mechanical rates through 2032

Phonorecords V is the latest installment in a five-yearly cycle in which the Board sets the statutory mechanical rate under Section 115 of the US Copyright Act – the royalty owed each time a song is reproduced and distributed, from a vinyl pressing to a download. The settlement was filed on June 29 by the three major record companies, indie labels, and the industry’s main publisher and songwriter bodies.

Source: CRB proposes extending physical and download mechanical rates through 2032

Meta ditches Muse Image AI feature because it ‘misses the mark’ on users’ privacy

Meta has said ⁠it is discontinuing an AI feature launched this week that allowed users to generate images using public Instagram ⁠accounts, after drawing widespread ⁠criticism over ​privacy concerns, including from a Hollywood union. “We’ve heard the feedback that ⁠this feature missed the mark, so it’s no longer available,” it said. The feature, integrated into its Meta ‌AI chatbot, can use photos as input and lets users edit generated images directly through sketches.

Source: Meta ditches Muse Image AI feature because it ‘misses the mark’ on users’ privacy

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