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Warner Music Signs Deal with AI Song Generator Suno After Settling Lawsuit

The Guardian

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Date Published
25 Nov 2025
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2
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Created
26 Nov 2025, 11:15 am

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Music company representing Coldplay and Ed Sheeran had sued tech platform alleging mass copyright infringement Business live – latest updates

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Warner Music Group has entered into a licensing agreement with AI song generator Suno, following the settlement of a copyright infringement lawsuit against the platform. This deal marks a significant move within the music industry, as it allows major Warner artists to opt into AI-generated music using their likenesses. Suno, described as a 'ChatGPT for music,' will introduce more advanced and licensed models, addressing issues related to copyright by providing paid services with limited downloads. The partnership highlights the tension between creative rights and AI advancements, emphasizing the need for proper governance to ensure fair remuneration for artists.

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Warner acts such as Coldplay can choose to opt in to their music being used by Suno to create AI music.Photograph: Charles Sykes/Invision/APView image in fullscreenWarner acts such as Coldplay can choose to opt in to their music being used by Suno to create AI music.Photograph: Charles Sykes/Invision/APWarner Music signs deal with AI song generator Suno after settling lawsuitMusic company representing Coldplay and Ed Sheeran had sued tech platform alleging mass copyright infringementBusiness live – latest updatesWarner Music has signed a licensing deal with the artificial intelligence song generator Suno after settling a copyright infringement lawsuit it launched against the service a year agoWarner, the world’s third-largest music company and home to acts including Coldplay, Charli XCX and Ed Sheeran, is the first of the major record labels to partner officially with the company.As part of their agreement, users will be allowed to create AI-generated songs on Suno via simple text prompts using the voices, names and likenesses of the Warner acts who choose to opt in to the service.Robert Kyncl, the chief executive of Warner Music Group, said the deal showed that artificial intelligence could be “pro-artist” when it is licensed to “reflect the value of music”.“This landmark pact with Suno is a victory for the creative community that benefits everyone,” he said. “With Suno rapidly scaling, both in users and monetisation, we’ve seized this opportunity to shape models that expand revenue and deliver new fan experiences.”Paul McCartney joins music industry protest against AI with silent trackRead moreAs part of the agreement Suno,heralded as the ChatGPT for music, has committed to making changes to its platform to launch new, more advanced and licensed models next year, including putting new limitations on downloads for users.Suno said that only paid-tier subscribers would be able to download its AI music creations, and paid users would also have to pay more for downloads and have a cap on how many they could make.The agreement to introduce the new models, which would lead to the existing versions being phased out, seeks to stem the thousands of AI tracks made on Suno that subsequently flood streaming services.The deal comes just over a week after Warner Music settled a lawsuit and struck a partnership agreement with the rival AI song generation service Udio.Last year, the world’s biggest record companies sued Suno and Udio for copyright infringement, alleging that their softwaresteals music to “spit out” millions of AI-generated songswithout permission from artists.Universal Music, the world’s biggest music company, was the first to announce a settlement with either company when it reached a deal with Udio last month. Universal remains in litigation with Suno while Sony Music is suing both Suno and Udio.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionAs part of Warner Music’s deal, Suno has acquired Songkick, the live-music and concert-discovery platform, for an undisclosed amount.In the UK, the government has been consulting on a new intellectual property framework for AI which initially looked like it would result in AI companies being able to use works from the creative community to train their models without permission.The issue has led to awave of protests from the creative community, which wants to see an opt-in approach, so that when a work is used it can be identified and licensed to remunerate creators.Last week, Liz Kendall, the technology secretary, said shewanted to “reset” the debateand indicated she was sympathetic to artists’ demands not to have their works scraped by AI companies without payment.Explore more on these topicsMusic industryArtificial intelligence (AI)ComputingnewsShareReuse this content