Leaked source code reveals how AI music company Suno actually assembled substantial portions of its training library.
A hack of Suno AI music exposed its source code, showing it scraped millions of songs from YouTube, Deezer, and Genius to train its song generator.
The hack allegedly confirms the suspicions of record labels and artists that their music is used in the creation of AI music.
YouTube joins Meta in appealing a jury verdict that faulted them for users’ social media addiction
YouTube has appealed a landmark social media addiction lawsuit verdict in Los Angeles. The jury found YouTube and Meta ...
A file for YouTube Music notes that Suno had consumed 2,013,545 YouTube Music clips at the point it was last updated.
The hacker used an employee's credentials to access source code, which revealed how Suno scraped decades of audio.
A Queensland family been awoken by a surprise visitor when their ring camera captured a python slithering over their front ...
Can’t stream a YouTube video on a plane? Worried that a rare concert recording will disappear? Need to edit a clip for a ...
Sony's plans to wind down disc production for its game consoles have met with fury (and memes) across the board. But this ...
Taylor Stanberry became the first woman to win Florida's annual python challenge last year by catching 60 pythons during the ...
Even as Chrome is killing ad blockers, DuckDuckGo's new video player now blocks ads by default on YouTube and elsewhere. Duck ...
Tired of slow web wrappers? The new YTubic YouTube Music desktop client brings speed, synced lyrics, and a mini-player to ...
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