No, PremiumBeat likely does not accept AI-generated music. As a Shutterstock property since 2015, PremiumBeat follows parent company policies on AI content. Their contributor agreement requires 100% ownership and control of copyrights, a requirement AI-generated music cannot definitively meet under current legal frameworks.
What Are PremiumBeat's Copyright Requirements?
According to PremiumBeat's contributor guidelines, music contributors must:
- Own 100% of copyright in both composition and master recording
- Provide exclusive content not available on other platforms
- Avoid soundalikes and uncleared samples
- Use only pre-cleared sample libraries if any samples are included
The 100% copyright requirement effectively excludes AI-generated content, as copyright law in most jurisdictions requires human authorship. AI-generated music cannot receive copyright protection, making ownership certification impossible.
What Is the Shutterstock Connection to PremiumBeat?
Shutterstock acquired PremiumBeat in 2015 and also owns Pond5 (acquired 2022). Both platforms follow similar AI policies:
Pond5: Explicitly bans AI-generated content from contributors.
Shutterstock Images/Video: Has taken conservative positions on AI-generated content.
PremiumBeat: While no explicit public statement exists, parent company policies and contributor requirements suggest AI content would be rejected.
Warning Shutterstock has licensed its music libraries to OpenAI for AI training purposes, but this doesn't mean they accept AI-generated submissions. Like other platforms, they profit from human content used to train AI while excluding AI output.
Why Copyright Ownership Matters
PremiumBeat's 100% copyright requirement isn't arbitrary. It protects their business model:
License validity. When customers purchase a license, they need assurance the music is legally cleared. AI content's uncertain status creates liability.
Indemnification. Contributors typically indemnify platforms against copyright claims. AI content creators cannot make this guarantee.
Professional market. PremiumBeat serves commercial productions requiring bulletproof licensing.
What Is the AI Training Paradox?
Interestingly, Shutterstock (PremiumBeat's parent) has partnered with OpenAI to license access to their image, video, and music libraries for AI training. This creates a contradiction:
- Human contributors' music helps train AI models
- AI-generated music using similar training cannot be submitted back
- Contributors may feel their work powers competitors they can't access
This pattern is common across stock media platforms and remains controversial in creator communities.
How to Contribute to PremiumBeat
For human composers, the submission process involves:
- Apply through Shutterstock's contributor portal
- Submit demo tracks for review
- Sign contributor agreement with copyright warranties
- Submit exclusive content upon acceptance
AI-generated submissions would fail the copyright warranty requirement, as creators cannot legally certify ownership of AI output.
How Does PremiumBeat Compare to Other Stock Platforms?
| Platform | Parent Company | AI Policy | Contributor Model |
|---|---|---|---|
| PremiumBeat | Shutterstock | Likely banned | Semi-open |
| Pond5 | Shutterstock | Explicit ban | Open |
| AudioJungle | Envato | Explicit ban | Open |
| Artlist | Independent | Not accepted | Selective |
All major stock music platforms effectively exclude AI content, whether through explicit bans or copyright requirements.
What Are the Alternatives for AI Music Creators?
Since PremiumBeat isn't viable for AI music, consider:
Streaming distribution:
- DistroKid
- RouteNote
- UnitedMasters
- LANDR
Direct licensing:
- Personal outreach
- Portfolio website
- AI-focused platforms
AI-native services:
- Loudly
- SOUNDRAW
- Beatoven.ai
See our complete guide to stock music sites and AI policies for alternatives.
Will PremiumBeat Change Its Policy?
Given Shutterstock's conservative approach to AI content across its properties, a policy change seems unlikely without:
- Legal clarity on AI copyright ownership
- Industry-standard AI content disclosure systems
- Customer demand for AI music in commercial productions
For now, AI music creators should focus on platforms with explicit acceptance policies rather than hoping traditional stock sites will evolve.
What Is the Answer?
PremiumBeat's 100% copyright ownership requirement effectively excludes AI-generated music, even without an explicit AI ban. As part of the Shutterstock family (which also owns Pond5), conservative AI policies are expected. AI creators should look to streaming distribution or AI-native platforms for monetization opportunities.
