TechCrunch News 2024年11月06日
As generative AI gets better, what will happen to artists?
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Suno CEO在Berklee College的经历,探讨AI在音乐创作中的作用。有人认为AI是强大工具,也有人担忧其带来的影响,如侵权、失业等,但也有人认为会创造更多艺术。娱乐行业对AI工具的反应不一。

🎵Suno CEO让学生用其产品体验AI创作歌曲

💡AI被认为可帮助创作者,但也存在侵权担忧

📱智能手机普及,摄影虽更普遍但专业与非专业有质的区别

🎸Splice推出AI工具助客户提升技艺

Suno CEO Mikey Shulman found himself in an unlikely place for the founder of a generative AI music company: a songwriting class at Berklee College of Music.

“It sounds like walking into the lion’s den,” Shulman said onstage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024. “The approach of just walking in there and saying, ‘don’t worry, there’s no disruption here, everything is fine,’ is probably not the right approach.’”

So how did he (at least try to) win them over? Shulman had the students use Suno to see what it’s like to make a song with AI.

“You realize that it’s actually quite an empowering tool, viewed in a slightly different light,” he said.

AI builders might argue that they’re making tools to help creative people augment their work, like the drum machine or the synthesizer. And some artists might say that these tools are training off of their work without consent to market a product back to them that could take their jobs. But some entrepreneurs see these powerful music, video, and image generators as inevitable.

“I challenge somebody to tell me that photography is somehow less valuable now than it was 50 years ago,” said Shulman. Across the crowd, people use their iPhones to take photos and videos of the discussion, showing just how universal smartphones have become.

“That is the promise of technology — technology is not done, or any technological arc is not done until it is in the hands of literally every single person,” said Luma AI CEO Amit Jain.

Digital photography is certainly more ubiquitous now than it was in the era of the flip phone, and some people might be less likely to hire professionals for photoshoots or events. But there’s still a fundamental difference in quality between the work of professional photographers and a quick snap on a smartphone.

“I think those people who have taste and who have skill will be able to do so much more,” Jain said.

On the other hand, there are companies like Splice, which have been providing services to musicians for years, but only recently began to incorporate AI.

“Over the last couple of years, we’ve launched these new AI-based tools that really help our customers […] take their craft to the next level,” said Kakul Srivastava, CEO of Splice.

Still, the reaction of the entertainment industry to these tools is mixed. Hollywood writers campaigned for protections against losing their jobs to AI. In the music industry, companies like Suno have been implicated in lawsuits from record labels, alleging the unlicensed use of copyrighted songs in their training data. And yet, the musician Timbaland is a strategic advisor to Suno.

“Maybe there will be jobs lost, but I actually think that there will be more art created, because more of us will have the ability to bring that truth out to life,” Srivastava said.

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Suno AI音乐 创作工具 娱乐行业 争议
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