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An AI-generated band got 1m plays on Spotify. Now music insiders say listeners should be warned

about 9 hours ago
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They went viral, amassing more than 1m streams on Spotify in a matter of weeks, but it later emerged that hot new band the Velvet Sundown were AI-generated – right down to their music, promotional images and backstory.The episode has triggered a debate about authenticity, with music industry insiders saying streaming sites should be legally obliged to tag music created by AI-generated acts so consumers can make informed decisions about what they are listening to.Initially, the “band”, described as “a synthetic music project guided by human creative direction”, denied they were an AI creation, and released two albums in June called Floating On Echoes and Dust And Silence, which were similar to the country folk of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.Things became more complicated when someone describing himself as an “adjunct” member told reporters that the Velvet Sundown had used the generative AI platform Suno in the creation of their songs, and that the project was an “art hoax”.The band’s official social media channels denied this and said the group’s identity was being “hijacked”, before releasing a statement confirming that the group was an AI creation and was “Not quite human.

Not quite machine” but living “somewhere in between”.Several figures told the Guardian that the present situation, where streaming sites, including Spotify, are under no legal obligation to identify AI-generated music, left consumers unaware of the origins of the songs they’re listening to.Roberto Neri, the chief executive of the Ivors Academy, said: “AI-generated bands like Velvet Sundown that are reaching big audiences without involving human creators raise serious concerns around transparency, authorship and consent.”Neri added that if “used ethically”, AI has the potential to enhance songwriting, but said at present his organisation was concerned with what he called “deeply troubling issues” with the use of AI in music.Sophie Jones, the chief strategy officer at the music trade body the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), backed calls for clear labelling.

“We believe that AI should be used to serve human creativity, not supplant it,” said Jones.“That’s why we’re calling on the UK government to protect copyright and introduce new transparency obligations for AI companies so that music rights can be licensed and enforced, as well as calling for the clear labelling of content solely generated by AI.”Liz Pelly, the author of Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist, said independent artists could be exploited by people behind AI bands who might create tracks that are trained using their music.She referred to the 2023 case of a song that was uploaded to TikTok, Spotify and YouTube, which used AI-generated vocals claiming to be the Weeknd and Drake.Universal Music Group said the song was “infringing content created with generative AI” and it was removed shortly after it was uploaded.

It is not clear what music the Velvet Sundown’s albums were trained on, with critics saying that lack of clarity means independent artists could be losing out on compensation.Pelly said: “We need to make sure that it’s not just pop stars whose interests are being looked after, all artists should have the ability to know if their work has been exploited in this way.”For some, the appearance of the Velvet Sundown is the logical next step as music and AI combine, while legislation is fighting to keep up with a rapidly changing musical ecosystem.Sign up to Sleeve NotesGet music news, bold reviews and unexpected extras.Every genre, every era, every weekafter newsletter promotionJones said: “The rise of AI-generated bands and music entering the market points to the fact that tech companies have been training AI models using creative works – largely without authorisation or payment to creators and rights-holders – in order to directly compete with human artistry.

”Neri added that the UK has a chance to lead the world in ethical AI adoption in music but said there needed to be robust legal frameworks that “guarantee consent and fair remuneration for creators, and clear labelling for listeners”,“Without such safeguards, AI risks repeating the same mistakes seen in streaming, where big tech profits while music creators are left behind,” he added,Aurélien Hérault, the chief innovation officer at the music streaming service Deezer, said the company uses detection software that identifies AI-generated tracks and tags them,He said: “For the moment, I think platforms need to be transparent and try to inform users,For a period of time, what I call the ‘naturalisation of AI’, we need to inform users when it’s used or not.

”Hérault did not rule out removing tagging in future if AI-generated music becomes more popular and musicians begin to use it like an “instrument”.Deezer recently told the Guardian that up to seven out of 10 streams of AI-generated music on the platform are fraudulent.At present, Spotify does not label music as AI-generated and has previously been criticised for populating some playlists with music by “ghost artists” – fake acts that create stock music.A spokesperson for the company said Spotify does not prioritise AI-generated music.“All music on Spotify, including AI-generated music, is created, owned and uploaded by licensed third parties,” they said.

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Why is the number of first-time US homebuyers at a generational low?

A cornerstone of the American dream is drifting out of reach.The estimated number of first-time homebuyers in the US dropped to a little more than 1.1 million in 2024, according to data from the National Association of Realtors shared with the Guardian: the lowest level since the NAR started tracking new buyers, in 1989.Economic instability is keeping the housing market at a standstill, with the number of new home owners at its lowest point in three decades. How did we get here?Home prices and mortgage rates remain high years after the peak pandemic housing boom

1 day ago
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Crunching the data: are resident doctors in England badly paid?

Resident doctors in England have voted to strike for five days from 25 July, reigniting one of the NHS’s most bitter industrial disputes.At the heart of the row is pay: the British Medical Association (BMA) says resident (formerly known as junior) doctors have seen their real earnings fall by more than a fifth since 2008. The government says the union’s demands are unaffordable, and they’ve already received generous rises in recent years.So are strikes an “unnecessary and unreasonable” move, in the words of the health secretary, Wes Streeting? Or a necessary step on the path to restore doctor’s pay?After the global financial crisis of 2007-08, pay stagnated across the board in Britain. But resident doctors have had it worse than most

2 days ago
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Fundamental flaws in the NHS psychiatric system | Letters

I am disappointed to read such a scathing review of Bella Jackson’s book Fragile Minds (A furious assault on NHS psychiatry, 30 June). It is a difficult read, and yet I thought that Jackson wrote about her experiences with compassion for both patients and staff unwittingly caught up in erratic and overstretched services.I am a doctor, with experience as a psychiatric patient and as a senior “staff grade” doctor on an acute psychiatric ward. My memoir, Unshackled Mind: A Doctor’s Story of Trauma, Liberation and Healing, confirms Jackson’s claims that abuses do happen in these places. More subtly, there is a continued reliance on the disease-centred model of biomedical psychiatry without sufficient attention paid to the circumstances and adversities suffered by patients before they ever came in contact with psychiatry

3 days ago
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The toxic effect of poverty on children’s health | Letters

In the last 18 months I’ve found myself having to respond to claims that mental health culture has gone too far, that we’re over-diagnosing mental health problems and that we’re simply medicalising the ups and downs of life. I hope the children’s commissioner’s report (Children in England ‘living in almost Dickensian levels of poverty’, 8 July) is a moment for everyone to reflect on what the “ups and downs” of life look like for too many young people: going without food, cold and mouldy homes, and not feeling safe in the area you live.There is a toxic relationship between poverty and mental health. A fact reinforced by the latest NHS data, showing that mental health problems among adults are at record levels, with people in the most deprived areas hardest hit.As the report itself cites, young people are understandably concerned about waits for mental health treatment

3 days ago
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Pain relief is available for gynaecological procedures – so why isn’t it used? | Letters

Your article about oesophageal cancer (NHS pharmacies to pilot ‘sponge on a string’ test to spot cancer precursor, 9 July) reminds me of the recent one about poor uptake of cervical screening (One in three across UK are overdue for cervical cancer screening, 20 June). You cite embarrassment and pain as major barriers to improving screening, but the misogyny of healthcare is of crucial importance.Women wait months to see gynaecologists then are given no pain relief for painful procedures. They put up with this as they don’t want to be put back in a queue. There is access to topical lidocaine spray and entonox, and it should be routine

3 days ago
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Doctors in England: what are your views on the planned strike action?

Resident doctors in the NHS in England are planning to strike for five days later this month from 25 to 30 July, as they push for a 29% pay rise over the next few years.The doctors’ union, the British Medical Association (BMA), says it will not accept a lower figure than 29% – because it says that’s the extent of the real-terms loss of earnings resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors, have suffered since 2008.The health secretary Wes Streeting has said the industrial action is “completely unreasonable”, and the government will not revisit the 5.4% salary increase it gave resident doctors for 2025-26.Turnout in the ballot was 55%, with 90% of those who took part backing strike action

3 days ago
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Thames Water announces hosepipe ban as dry weather depletes reservoirs

about 3 hours ago
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Bank of England governor says jobs slowdown could prompt rate cut; European markets fall after Trump tariff threat – business live

about 3 hours ago
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An AI-generated band got 1m plays on Spotify. Now music insiders say listeners should be warned

about 9 hours ago
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Scientists reportedly hiding AI text prompts in academic papers to receive positive peer reviews

about 12 hours ago
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Tour de France 2025: stage 10 from Ennezat to Mont-Dore Puy de Sancy – live

about 3 hours ago
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England v India: third men’s cricket Test, day five – live

about 3 hours ago