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In today’s edition, we look at predictions about how singers like Beyonce “will no longer die,” with͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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June 9, 2023
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Technology

Technology
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Louise Matsakis
Louise Matsakis

Hi, and welcome to Semafor Tech, the newsletter I write with Reed Albergotti while listening to house music on YouTube and SoundCloud. The DJ sets I prefer largely can’t be found on streaming platforms like Spotify, since they sample existing songs subject to copyright protection. For decades, record labels have fought emerging music genres like hip-hop or electronic that relied on sampling and other forms of new technology.

That battle has now intensified thanks to AI, which has made it possible to create music that sounds like the work of other living musicians. I endured Los Angeles’ famous rush hour traffic earlier this week to attend an event in Hollywood about the future of AI music. Read on below for a startling prediction from Black Eyed Peas frontman will.i.am.

Move Fast/Break Things

➚ MOVE FAST: Gathering info. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s global listening tour could help garner goodwill as countries look to regulate AI and take advantage of its benefits. He also made pitches that would help the industry, like encouraging South Korean companies to produce more of the chips needed to power AI models.

➘ BREAK THINGS: Spreading misinfo. Fake images of Donald Trump hugging Anthony Fauci preview what’s to come in the 2024 U.S. presidential race, our Semafor Principals colleagues reported. The possibly AI-generated pictures were part of a video by Trump rival Ron DeSantis’ team. Interspersed with real photos, it’s a disturbing glimpse of how difficult it will be for voters to separate fact from fiction.

DeSantis campaign
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Artificial Flavor
nhciao

This is a QR code. For quite a while now, humans have been trying to make QR codes look more interesting, mainly by inserting corporate logos. AI seems to have solved that problem. Using Stable Diffusion, a creative person figured out how to turn them into actual artwork. Scan this picture with your phone and see for yourself.

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Louise Matsakis

What AI means for Taylor Swift’s music

THE SCENE

Black Eyed Peas frontman will.i.am sees a future where stars like Beyonce and Taylor Swift “will no longer die,” as bespoke AI models trained on their work keep churning out new hits in their style and voice even after they pass away.

The hip-hop icon’s prediction, made at a panel event hosted by Artificial Intelligence Los Angeles on Tuesday, echoes some of the narratives about AI taking hold in corners of the music industry, which is once again struggling with how to adapt in the face of new technology, two decades after digital streaming upended its business model.

In April, a song called Heart on My Sleeve that used a form of AI to mimic the voices of Drake and The Weeknd was listened to millions of times before Universal Music Group filed copyright complaints to get it taken down from platforms like Spotify and YouTube. Weeks earlier, an executive at the record label warned that AI could become a “calamity for artists.”

Still, will.i.am and other speakers at the event were mostly optimistic about what AI would mean for the future of music making, betting that it would more likely spawn new genres than make artists obsolete. But discussions about how it might impact those who hold the rights to it permeated the evening.

The president of AI LA, Todd Terrazas, said that artists had been “cloned without their permission,” a practice that another panelist referred to as “musical disinformation.”

Briquet-Genin/ABACA/Shutterstock

LOUISE’S VIEW

Creating the eternal ghost of an existing artist may be one of the least interesting things people will do with AI music tools  — the equivalent of a cheap party trick. Instead, musicians can generate things like unique samples or a musical solo featuring an instrument they don’t know how to play. While they might channel or remix Taylor Swift’s voice, the best examples will be clever artistic references, like how hip-hop artists used drum machines and samples starting in the 1970s.

That’s essentially how the technology is already being used. Antony Demekhin, co-founder of the AI music startup Tuney, said that Heart on My Sleeve almost certainly wasn’t created with a generative program like ChatGPT or DALL-E, which can spit out a Shakespeare essay or a finished painting wholesale.

Instead, someone more likely wrote, sang, and recorded the track, and then put it through filters that imitated the rappers’ voices. That’s still impressive, but there’s significant differences between the kinds of tech involved.

“The expectation is that you can get an AI to sing like Drake, which is not the case,” Demekhin told Semafor. “Text-to-voice is not 100%, but it’s getting there. Text-to-true generative singing? That’s even harder.”

As the technology keeps improving, the unanswered question is whether record labels and the courts will let people openly publish music using programs trained on other artists’ work. One solution is for tech companies to simply license it for that purpose, which is what some AI music startups are doing.

“Telling people that we’re copyright safe matters,” said Karen Allen, the CEO and co-founder of Infinite Album, which focuses on generating music for gaming livestreamers. “I want people to know where we stand on that issue, it is a bit up in the air with a lot of companies.” She said that she saw an opportunity in the market after learning that streamers often receive copyright takedown notices when they play a game’s official sound track.

Demekhin said that Tuney is largely relying on audio recorded by artists he worked with in his previous life running a music production company. Musicians send Tuney unfinished tracks or song fragments that have few other uses. “A lot of the people we talk to that are really, really good do not see AI as a threat,” he explained. “They see it as a way to monetize something that they weren’t able to monetize before.”

For Room for Disagreement and the rest of the story, read here.

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Semafor Stat

The percentage spike in signups Netflix saw after cracking down on password sharing, according to analytics firm Antenna. That’s a bigger jump than the company saw during early Covid lockdowns.

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One Good Text

Amit Bendov is co-founder and CEO of AI sales tool Gong.

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Obsessions
Reuters/Loren Elliott

Apple may have finally made the metaverse happen, and that’s good news for Meta. Mark Zuckerberg reoriented his company around the concept, but his vision was met with skepticism from investors and the media.

A lot of that backlash comes from Facebook’s bruised reputation, which stands in stark contrast to Apple’s teflon luster. The tech press, which received 15 to 30-minute guided demos of Apple’s Vision Pro headset on Monday, has been gushing about the device.

Zuckerberg was less impressed, according to a Meta employee who tuned into the company’s all-hands meeting Thursday. Meta’s CEO pointed out that the “good news” was that Apple didn’t unveil a major breakthrough that defies the “laws of physics,” as Zuckerberg put it. That appears to be true.

The Vision Pro’s display is much better than anything on the market. But all those tiny flashing lights take up a lot of energy. Apple’s device requires an external battery pack, Zuckerberg pointed out, and costs seven times more than Meta’s Quest 3 device, which comes out this fall. And though it’s not out yet, reviewers have noticed Apple’s product is on the heavy side. “They made that design trade-off,” Zuckerberg said at the meeting.

That means Apple’s device may not work as well for exercise, for instance, one of the more compelling use cases. And it isn’t geared as much toward gaming, another big one. “Every demo they showed was a person sitting on a couch,” Zuckerberg told employees. (That’s an exaggeration. They also showed a father wearing one at his daughter’s birthday party, which even Apple lovers found depressing).

The really good news for Meta, though, is that Apple is throwing its weight and reality distortion field behind normalizing VR and that will push more people to try out the technology.

How many more? That’s the question.

Apple is taking a gamble that it can reverse the ho hum consumer response to these products. But Meta had already made that gamble and until Monday, that was a very lonely place to be.

— Reed

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