Musicians Union sues Universal and Warner over AI use

The American Federation of Musicians has filed a lawsuit against Universal Music Group and Warner Music Group, alleging breaches of their collective bargaining agreement related to artificial intelligence licensing deals.

The suit, filed on June 5, claims the labels licensed sound recordings to AI companies Suno and Udio without providing compensation or credit to AFM-represented musicians as required under their agreement. According to the complaint, the major labels have refused to share details about which recordings are involved or how proceeds from the deals are being handled. The AFM states that the labels protected their own interests while declining to compensate the musicians whose work was used to train the AI systems. The dispute traces back to 2024 when the labels sued Suno and Udio over unauthorized use of copyrighted material. By fall 2025 the parties reached licensing agreements that included provisions for artist compensation on an opt-in basis. UMG described its relationship with the AFM as strong and said it would address issues through negotiations. WMG expressed disappointment with the lawsuit but said it remained open to continued discussions.

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Illustration of Spotify AI remix features and premium concert tickets for a news article.
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Spotify unveils AI remix tools and reserved concert tickets for premium users

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Spotify announced a partnership with Universal Music Group to offer AI-powered remixing and cover song tools as a paid add-on for Premium subscribers. The streaming service also introduced a reserved ticketing feature for dedicated fans in partnership with Live Nation.

Spotify and Universal Music Group have signed a licensing agreement that will let Premium subscribers create AI covers and remixes of UMG tracks. The deal was announced on May 21 during Spotify’s Investor Day. It marks a shift after Spotify’s earlier efforts to limit AI-generated content on the platform.

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Universal Music Group and Spotify have announced a partnership to develop an AI tool allowing fans to create covers and remixes of songs from participating artists.

Deezer disclosed on May 4 that 44 percent of all songs uploaded to its platform—around 75,000 daily—are AI-generated, up sharply from 10 percent in January and 28 percent last September. Despite this surge, the tracks account for just 1-3 percent of listening time, thanks to detection tools that flag 85 percent for demonetization and exclude them from recommendations.

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The Japanese government announced on Friday it will establish a council of experts to discuss whether unauthorized use of sound data in AI-generated content emulating voice actors violates the Civil Code, amid advances in generative AI. The Justice Ministry panel will also address use of actors' images and present guidelines by July, as no legal precedent exists.

A US appeals court has warned that lawyers may face sanctions after submitting an appeal filled with fictitious quotations generated by artificial intelligence. The case involved an attempt to force Meta to remove a critical post from a dating safety group on Facebook.

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Jack Antonoff publicly criticized musicians who use artificial intelligence to create songs. The Bleachers frontman posted a note on Instagram on May 13 that described AI-assisted work as a betrayal of the creative process.

 

 

 

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