Rights

Midjourney Says Disney Cannot Prevent AI Training and Wants to ‘Have It Both Ways’

Midjourney responded to a lawsuit from Disney and Universal, arguing that the studios cannot stop AI training and cannot ‘have it both ways’ on AI. “Copyright law does not confer absolute control over the use of copyrighted works,” Midjourney’s lawyers argued. “The limited monopoly granted by copyright must give way to fair use, which safeguards countervailing public interests in the free flow of ideas and information.”

Source: Midjourney Says Disney Cannot Prevent AI Training and Wants to ‘Have It Both Ways’

Kobalt’s AI deal with ElevenLabs guarantees publishing ‘parity’ with recorded music

The opt-in agreement between Kobalt and $3.3 billion-valued Eleven Labs establishes what sources describe as “parity” between publishing and recorded music revenues. Each side will receive an approximate 50/50 split of royalties generated from the AI platform.  Eleven Music’s basic tier is trained on production music, but a forthcoming ‘Eleven Music Pro’ offering will soon be trained on cleared catalog from Kobalt and Merlin.

Source: Exclusive: Kobalt’s AI deal with Suno rival ElevenLabs guarantees publishing ‘parity’ with recorded music

ElevenLabs launches an AI music generator, which it claims is cleared for commercial use 

The AI audio-generation unicorn ElevenLabs announced the launch of a new model that allows users to generate music that’s cleared for commercial use. This move marks ElevenLabs’ expansion beyond its main focus thus far in its three years of existence, which has been building AI audio tools. ElevenLabs is a leader among companies making text-to-speech AI products, and it has expanded into conversational bots and tools that translate speech into other languages.

Source: ElevenLabs launches an AI music generator, which it claims is cleared for commercial use | TechCrunch

Canadian Author Sues Four AI Companies for Copyright Infringement

J.B. MacKinnon of Vancouver has filed class action lawsuits against Anthropic, Databricks, Meta, and Nvidia, alleging they illegally used copyrighted works by Canadian writers to train their large language models. The lawsuit claims MacKinnon’s books were part of a 196,640-book dataset that Nvidia used without securing licensing fees or author consent. “The models were entirely built on the mining of copyrighted work,” MacKinnon told the CBC.

Source: Canadian Author Sues Four AI Companies for Copyright Infringement

Recognition Music prices $372M bond deal backed by Justin Bieber and Shakira catalogs

Recognition Music Group has priced its USD $372 million asset-backed securities (ABS) offering on July 30, with the bonds carrying a 5.604% coupon and yielding 1.7 percentage point over the benchmark. The bonds were three times oversubscribed, suggesting strong investor appetite for music royalty-backed debt.

Source: Recognition Music prices oversubscribed $372M bond deal backed by Justin Bieber and Shakira catalogs

Stability AI is developing a legit ‘opt in’ artist marketplace amid lawsuits over scraping

UK-based Stability AI, which faces lawsuits over allegedly scraping images without authorization to train its AI models, is looking at developing a marketplace where artists can license their work for AI training. CEO Prem Akkaraju told the Financial Times in an interview that the proposed marketplace would allow creators to voluntarily submit artwork and receive compensation when AI companies use their content for model training.

Source: Stability AI is developing a legit ‘opt in’ artist marketplace… amid lawsuits over unauthorized scraping

Amazon to Pay New York Times at Least $20 Million a Year in AI Deal

The financial terms of the multiyear deal, which haven’t previously been disclosed, offer a window into how publishers and artificial-intelligence companies are valuing news content in the midst of a seismic change in how consumers seek information online. The annual payment amounts to nearly 1% of the Times’s total 2024 revenue. It was the first AI-related licensing pact for the Times and Amazon’s first such agreement with a publisher.

Source: Amazon to Pay New York Times at Least $20 Million a Year in AI Deal

Copyright Lawsuit Accuses Meta of Pirating Adult Films for AI Training * TorrentFreak

Adult film producers Strike 3 Holdings and Counterlife Media have filed a significant copyright infringement lawsuit against tech giant Meta. A complaint filed at a California federal court alleges that their films were downloaded via BitTorrent for AI training purposes. With at least 2,396 movies at stake, potential damages could exceed 350 million dollars.

Source: Copyright Lawsuit Accuses Meta of Pirating Adult Films for AI Training * TorrentFreak

Trump Rejects Idea of Paying Copyright Holders for AI Training

President Trump waded into the complex issue of paying copyright holders whose works are used for AI training, saying it is impractical and would put the U.S. at a disadvantage to China. “You can’t be expected to have a successful AI program when every single article, book or anything else that you’ve read or studied, you’re supposed to pay for,” Trump said. “You just can’t do it, because it’s not doable.”

Source: Trump Rejects Idea of Paying Copyright Holders for AI Training: ‘It Just Doesn’t Work That Way’

Artists rage over changes to WeTransfer’s new terms of service

If you have ever needed to send a file larger than 20mb, you have probably used or at least heard of the online file-sending service WeTransfer. You may have also heard, earlier this month, a chorus of uproar on social media led by artists sharing screenshots of WeTransfer’s updated terms of service agreement that granted the company the right to use all materials transferred via their service, without any remuneration to the uploader or regard for their privacy.

Source: Comment | As artists rage over changes to WeTransfer’s terms of service, here’s why the company is now in its villain era

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