Business
Australian musicians fight back as AI training datasets harvest their work without permission
Copyright concerns mount as artists discover their recordings used to build artificial intelligence systems.
Business
Copyright concerns mount as artists discover their recordings used to build artificial intelligence systems.
Some of Australia's most recognised musical talent are expressing fury after discovering their work has been incorporated into AI training datasets without permission or compensation, according to multiple reports. Artists who have used new search tools to investigate the scope of the practice say the unauthorised use of their original recordings amounts to a significant breach of creative rights.
For Illawarra-based musicians and recording artists, the issue strikes at the heart of how creative work is valued in the digital age. Wollongong has fostered local talent across genres, and the ability to control how and where original work appears is fundamental to sustaining a living from music. The AI scrape raises questions about whether emerging creators will have meaningful protection as they navigate licensing and intellectual property in an industry increasingly shaped by machine learning.
The broader implication for Australia's creative economy is substantial. Without clear frameworks governing how AI systems access and use artistic content, individual artists lose leverage to negotiate fair terms. Industry bodies and policymakers are now watching how this dispute develops, as it will likely inform future legislation around digital rights and artist compensation in the age of artificial intelligence.
Sources: illawarramercury.com.au, illawarramercury.com.au.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
About this article
Published by The Daily Wollongong
More from Wollongong
Stay in the loop