News

In an interview on 'The New York Times' podcast 'Popcast' on Friday, May 30, Addison Rae revealed that she used to be paid ...
Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment are in talks to license their work to AI startups Udio ...
Major music companies are in talks to license their work to artificial intelligence startups Udio and Suno, deals that would ...
Last week, The New York Times announced a new AI licensing deal with Amazon. Now, the same strategy may be coming for the ...
Rae joined The New York Times ‘ Popcast on Friday (May 30), where she reflected on her time at Louisiana State when she was ...
The record labels are seeking license fees for their work and some equity in Suno and Udio, which use generative AI to help ...
The labels sued Suno and Udio last year, but have now entered negotiations for a deal that will benefit both parties but ...
Sony Music, Warner Music, and Universal Music Group reportedly have begun talks with AI startups that allow users to compose ...
Looking at why record labels second-guess their artists for doing exactly what they signed them to do, via Pink Floyd fighting their label to be weird.
In an interview with The New York Times' Popcast on Friday, May 30, the "Fame Is a Gun" singer (whose real name is Addison Rae Easterling) revealed that she used to be paid $20 by record labels to ...
The record labels are pushing to receive a small amount of equity in Suno and Udio. Udio and Suno allow aspiring music artists to receive an audio recording via prompts that describe sounds or ...
The top three record labels - Universal Music Group (OTCPK:UMGNF), Warner Music (NASDAQ:WMG) and Sony Music - are in talks to license their music with AI startups Udio and Suno, Bloomberg reported ...