AI-generated music is advancing fast, but behind every beat, lyric, and melody is the hard work of real human artists. Many musicians worry that their unique creative expressions are being scraped, copied, and used to train algorithms—often by companies profiting without giving credit or compensation to the original creators.
The letter’s signatories are sending a clear message: artists deserve control over how their music is used, especially in this new AI-driven era. This is not just a legal battle; it’s about respect for artistic integrity and creative ownership.
What You Can Do to Protect Your Music
The good news is that musicians don’t have to wait for lawmakers or corporations to act. There are practical steps you can take right now to defend your work, including:
Adding adversarial noise to your audio files: This technique subtly alters your tracks to disrupt AI training algorithms, making it harder for them to learn from your music without affecting the way it sounds to your listeners.
Using specialized tools designed to protect artist rights: Our software, ProtectMySound, applies advanced adversarial noise automatically to your music files, giving you a proactive way to safeguard your creations against unauthorized AI training.
Staying informed and connected: Join communities and movements advocating for artist rights in the AI age. Awareness and collective action amplify your voice and can drive meaningful change.
Join the Movement
The open letter by hundreds of artists is more than a statement—it’s a rallying cry for creators to take back control. At ProtectMySound, we believe every artist deserves the power to protect their music from unwanted AI use. If you’re worried about how your work might be exploited, start by securing it with tools designed specifically to fight back.
Protect your creativity. Protect your sound. Take the first step today with ProtectMySound.
For more resources and to easily disrupt AI from learning from your music, visit ProtectMySound. Together, we can ensure artists remain at the heart of music’s future.