Get answers to common questions about music marketing and promotion
No, Artlist does not accept AI-generated music from contributors. Their curated catalog focuses exclusively on human-created content, despite offering AI tools to their subscribers.
Ownership of AI music depends on your generator's terms and plan tier. Learn the difference between owning, licensing, and having commercial rights.
Spotify can detect spam and quality issues but doesn't have reliable AI-specific detection. Learn what they can and can't identify.
Registering AI-generated compositions with PROs is complicated. Copyright requires human authorship, which affects your ability to collect performance royalties.
No, you cannot monetize remixes of other creators' Suno songs. Only the original creator with a paid subscription can monetize. Remixes are for personal use only.
No, you cannot distribute new Udio music. Downloads are suspended after the October 2025 Universal settlement. Pre-settlement downloads may retain rights.
Yes, with a paid subscription. Stable Audio's free tier is non-commercial, but Creator and higher tiers grant commercial rights for streaming distribution.
If you wrote the lyrics, you can copyright them even if AI generated the music. The song becomes a hybrid with different protection for different elements.
The best AI music distributor depends on your workflow: high-volume uploads, free testing, AI-assisted releases, or bundled promotion.
Using AI to clone a real artist's voice without permission is illegal and violates platform policies. Learn what's allowed and what to avoid.
Yes, AI music can be sync licensed if you have commercial rights. Learn which platforms accept AI music and how to pitch for placements.
AI can generate music that unintentionally resembles copyrighted songs. Learn about Content ID risks, how to avoid similarity issues, and what to do if flagged.
Fully AI-generated music without human authorship may be public domain. Learn what this means, when it applies, and how to avoid it.
Major labels sued Suno and Udio in 2024, leading to settlements and a shift toward licensed AI models. Learn what this means for AI music creators.
Detailed FAQ covering AI music distribution questions not addressed in other articles. Quick answers to common questions.