Pop singer-songwriter Grimes has an interesting suggestion: You could use her AI-generated voice to compose a song, but you would You owe her 50% of the royalties.
Grimes announced the idea on Twitter earlier this morning, relaying a series of tweets A song generated entirely by AI that features The Weeknd and Drake’s vocal similarities that went viral last week. Grimes, known for the songs “Kill V. Maim” and “Oblivion,” has always had a tech/sci-fi twist to her music, but having fans develop music for her using artificial intelligence takes her thesis to a new level. Grimes says she’d be willing to split the royalties with the songwriter 50/50, which she claims is the same deal she would have with any collaborator, and that she’s not currently signed to a production company so there should be no legal issues.
“I think it’s cool to have the machine integrated and I love the idea of opening the source for all the artwork and killing the copyright,” Grimes chirp. she addedAnd “We make software that should simulate my voice well but we can also upload trunks and samples for ppl to train.”
In responses to her tweet, Grimes situation She had no idea what this collaboration would do She seems like in terms of distribution (for example, being included as a featured artist on the song or the main credit), and that she’s interested in being the guinea pig for this new operation. singer too Requested Any of them would have the AI programmed to not create any “poisonous words” or “political stuff” in their voice unless they “It’s a “small meme with your friends.” Those who don’t comply will face copyright takedowns, though Grimes had previously tainted the idea of copyrighted art.
Grimes’ proposal comes as Universal Music Group – one of the world’s largest music companies – grapples with how artificial intelligence is encroaching on the music industry. Last week, after The Weeknd and Drake’s AI-generated song broke, UMG issued A statement of the extent of the annoyance The label was in the duo’s spooky AI demo. The accident comes soon after UMG has reportedly asked streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music to stop allowing AI training on their platforms.
Want to learn more about artificial intelligence, chatbots, and the future of machine learning? Check out our full coverage of artificial intelligenceor browse our guides to The best free AI art generatorsAnd The best alternatives to ChatGPTAnd Everything we know about OpenAI’s ChatGPT.