Two Labels to Identify AI-Generated Content
Major music industry bodies on Saturday unveiled classification labels for content created by generative AI, hoping they will be widely adopted, especially by music streaming platforms. The initiative is led by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), headed by British executive Victoria Oakley, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), along with the Grammy Awards organizer and several independent music organizations. Two labels were proposed: the first, 'Created by AI,' applies to cases where AI was used 'to create all or most of the creative elements of the musical composition.' This includes, according to a statement, music 'entirely generated by text prompts for AI' as well as songs where the 'main vocal performance' or 'a core musical part' is produced by AI. The second label, called 'AI-Assisted,' is used for musical works 'that involve substantial human contribution to the creative process' but with AI used in some elements. For a song to be classified under this category, rather than 'AI-generated,' humans must have handled the key musical parts and any vocal performance. The bodies that developed these classifications will seek to 'implement them with digital music platforms, distributors, content aggregators, and standards-setting bodies,' according to the statement. To date, the French platform Deezer is the only one that automatically classifies AI-generated music tracks. At the end of April, Spotify launched a 'Verified by Spotify' tag indicating that an artist or band is likely human, not AI-generated.
Original source: Arriyadiyah
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