Hello Avon!
Beato makes a brief comment on someone's creation of an
artifical female singer's voice and that creator's stipulation
that the voice is free to use by anyone as long as the creator
gets 50% of the income.
the trick becomes how does the artist even know their
likeness (in sound terms) is being used?
Yes.. that is tricky. Perhaps the voice could be used by
cooperations in commercials or new songs ..in which case, then
the awareness of it would eventually spread and reach the
"owner's" ears. Even if it were used in new songs and labelled
as an AI-voice, then that would be the invitational vector to
begin investigations. Dishonest and unscrupulous people might
be able to get away with commandeering an AI-voice for their
own uses, but if the matter reaches litigation, they could be
faced with damages retroactively.
Maybe this is just an exploratory fad. If the fake or AI
material is labeled as such, maybe the public will grow
tired of it after a while and yearn for real music and
real artists.
If what it sounds like sounds artificial then perhaps yes,
but the alarm bells for all is that this stuff sounds very
close to the original artist..
Ah... if it is very close to the original artist, then that
voice and the material will not be able to hide. The original
artist's name will be essential on the artificial product for
successful promotion. And if that name is part of the product,
the original artist will eventually find out - and litigations
will ensue. Existing laws already exist that other people
can't arbitarily use anyone else's name on their product
without permission. Even using "Fake Drake" or "Drake-AI" tied
to the audio item is swimming in dangerous waters.
We have rights to our likeness, and that includes what we look
like and sound like.
When the self-title album KLAATU first came out, the talk was
that it was a Beatles come-back. The band intentionally
avoided the press and public performances for a long time.
"The band elected to include no photos, no individual musician
credits, and no biographical information in the album package"
The Beatles sound-alike was not intentional, but the Beatles
masquerade was started by a journalist in the UK and "not
denied" by the record company in the US.
--
../|ug
--- OpenXP 5.0.57
* Origin: What do you call a musician with problems? A trebled man. (21:4/106.21)