stayc main image

Lil Yachty Labels Drake The "Biggest Rapper Of All Time"

August 7, 2025

Lil Yachty isn’t shy about showing love for his close friend Drake. During a recent appearance on the MdFoodieBoyz podcast, the Some Sexy Songs 4 U artist labeled the Toronto superstar...

Read more
stayc main image

Ed Sheeran Reunites with Lookalike Rupert Grint for New Music Video After ‘Lego House’ 13 Years Ago

August 5, 2025

Ed Sheeran has brought back actor Rupert Grint for an upcoming music video, marking their first collaboration since 2011's viral "Lego House" visual. The new project accompanies Sheeran's track...

Read more
stayc main image

Spotify Launches "DJ Now Accepts Requests" — A Revolution in Fan-Driven Exploration

August 5, 2025

To improve real-time song discovery, Spotify is now testing a new feature dubbed "DJ Now Takes Requests." The feature adds a layer of crowd participation to streaming experiences by allowing users...

Read more
stayc main image

Roger Daltrey hits out at axed The Who drummer Zak Starkey for ‘incredibly upsetting’ remarks after fallout

August 5, 2025

The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has spoken out about his fallout with drummer Zak Starkey, calling the musician’s post-departure comments “incredibly upsetting.” Starkey, son of Beatles legend Ringo...

Read more
stayc main image

Love Like This: Fujii Kaze’s Daydream of Devotion, in Full Technicolor

August 5, 2025

Fujii Kaze’s “Love Like This” isn’t your average love song, it’s a shimmering, soulful glide through the kind of romance that doesn’t just sweep you off your feet, it levitates you. With effortless...

Read more
stayc main image

Lover Girl: Laufey’s Timeless Love Letter to the Hopeless Romantic in All of Us

August 5, 2025

Laufey’s “Lover Girl” isn’t just a song, it’s a soft, sweeping confession wrapped in strings, jazz chords, and the kind of vulnerability that makes you want to cry into your oat milk latte. With...

Read more
stayc main image

Saweetie and Boffum: A Viral Remix of Sass, Style, and Side-Eyes

August 5, 2025

When Saweetie hit the mic with her usual sparkle and sass, fans expected bops, but what they didn’t expect was boffum. Yes, boffum. The internet has been shaken, stirred, and straight-up meme-ified...

Read more
stayc main image

Jennie-festo of Power”: BLACKPINK’s Jennie Just Dropped an Album & We’re All Emotionally Unstable

August 5, 2025

After years of teasing, manifesting, and fans quite literally breaking down over one-song discographies, Jennie finally pulled the ultimate main character move, she dropped a full solo album. No...

Read more
stayc main image

Josh Freese Opens Up on Rejoining the Nine Inch Tails

August 5, 2025

In a heartfelt social media post, Freese explained that his decision to leave Nine Inch Nails was one of the hardest of his career. At the time, he and his wife were expecting their third child...

Read more
stayc main image

Ty Myers: Country’s Rising Star Who Raised $50K at Age 18

August 5, 2025

Meet Ty Myers, a teen from Texas who is transforming the concept of a country performer in 2025, music fans. Honky-tonk roots, modest ambition, and a popular TikTok moment from 2023 inspired his...

Read more
stayc main image

Demi Lovato Makes ‘Fast’ Return to Pop Music With New Single: Stream It Now

August 5, 2025

Demi Lovato is back in the pop scene with her latest single, “Fast,” which brings her back to the club-ready, EDM-infused beats that fans loved in hits like “Cool for the Summer” and...

Read more
stayc main image

Ejae: The Unsung Hero Behind Rumi’s Voice in KPop Demon Hunters

August 1, 2025

a deeper heartbeat emerged beneath the surface: the voice of Rumi— performed and co-written by the Korean-American singer-songwriter Ejae.

Read more

Facing the Music: Legal Challenges With AI and Copyright Laws

stayc main image

Photo Source: Linkedin.com

People draw inspiration from others when forming their ideas, it’s a fact of life. Sampling in music is no exception - and artists do it for a variety of reasons. Traditionally, copyright laws and industry agreements acted as guiding principles toward how we define intellectual property, and how laws were upheld when using others’ work to inspire your own.

As with everything these days, AI is shaking that up. This is especially true in the music industry, with revolutionary programs now on the market that have previously unimaginable capabilities. Numerous AI music generators are now available to create versatile music based on a set of parameters.

AI is causing trouble in the legal space of the music industry, and on multiple sides of it too. While it is amazing that a machine can now compose convincing, human-like art, it begs the question: where does the machine draw its inspiration?

How Does AI Make Music?

AI music generators use deep learning to recognize patterns within the compositions that are in their databases. These databases are huge, and the issue lies with the fact that they often include work from artists that did not provide their consent for it to be used. Frequently there are enough coherent traces of original pieces within AI music that can violate reproduction rights.

Much like releasing music with samples, you may need clearance one day to release music that used AI in its composition. If you can’t get that clearance, then it is likely AI will be able to detect that too.

Using Google’s Assistant to Recognize Samples

As AI gets more advanced, it has grown capable of detecting hidden samples in songs - even ones that have been chopped up, stretched, or are less than one second long. Decades after its release, sample-hunting communities on the internet were able to discover a hidden sample in Daft Punk’s “Face to Face” after using Google Assistant. They also discovered a ton of other hidden samples that have been a mystery for decades.

Google’s deep neural networks provide a more advanced recognition software than something like Shazam. If you use it in conjunction with other tools, you can coerce it to find a sample that it may have missed, which is something you may not have to do after the technology gets stronger. Only time will tell how strong copyright detection will get, maybe one day you won’t be able to hide a sample from AI.

Copyright Concerns and Legal Challenges

AI is presenting some challenges on all sides of the music industry, and those challenges boil down to the concept of ownership.

AI art lacks human authorship, so protecting it under copyright law will definitely prove challenging

Who is responsible for the work an AI produces; the company that created the system, the AI itself, or the owner of the works that informed the AI? Would a musician be able to fight a company that trained an AI to produce based on their work? It’s an interesting question, one that we are yet to find the answer to.

Where Are We Headed?

As it stands right now, AI producers seem to be able to disregard copyright laws in creating their work. On the other hand, AI is making it easier than ever to find out if a piece draws from existing work. This could have detrimental effects on smaller artists that do not have the rights to be “playing around” with certain sounds.

Computer-generated “art” is a contentious topic. Many artists are embracing it as a new tool in the creative process, while others fear that it will displace musicians from their jobs. Regardless, AI is already used extensively in music, oftentimes to boost the productivity of seasoned songwriters and producers. 

AI can be a tool for artists, but communities on Reddit are worried that AI sample detection may one day be able to automatically flag their work (correctly or incorrectly), and this could lead to legal issues. The implications of that remain to be seen.

The commercialization of art has always been a debate between those who are passionate about creative expression versus those who are in it for profit. This time, large AI corporations are the ones who seem to be disregarding copyright laws, which traditionally is what they would have enforced.

The music industry is known to experience mass hysteria whenever a new innovation shakes up the scene. While this could be a new innovation the industry will one day embrace, in this case, it seems that a legal nightmare is imminent. Only time will tell as to how it all plays out.