• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 5, Friday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

In AI Age, Music Industry Needs New Metadata Standards: Guest Column

Story Center by Story Center
October 10, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
In AI Age, Music Industry Needs New Metadata Standards: Guest Column

RELATED POSTS

Infinity Song Announces New Self-Titled Album

Bethel Music’s Jordan Colle Encourages Believers to Trust God’s Timing on New Single ‘Headed My Way’

Marilyn Manson Loses Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Sex Assault Lawsuit

In the rapidly evolving landscape of generative AI, the music industry is facing urgent and profound disruptions. As AI-generated compositions flood digital platforms, mimic human artists (to varying degrees), and go viral under fictional personas, the industry finds itself at a crossroads. At the heart of the issue is a challenge that resurfaces with every technological shift: creating fair and equitable licensing models. Time and again, new (and well-funded) companies enter the market with little interest in paying music creators what they’re truly worth. 

Since the inception of the concept of copyright, there has been an underlying assumption that songs originate from human creators. This foundation underpins everything from copyright registrations to royalty distributions. But in today’s landscape, generative AI can create music with minimal or no human input, and the industry’s legacy systems are simply not equipped to handle this new reality.

Related

When an AI-generated work appears on a streaming platform, who owns it?  Who should get paid if it racks up millions of streams or is licensed for film, TV or ads? And how is it fair for these AI-created works to siphon off streams — and revenue — that would otherwise go to human-made music?  These questions remain largely unanswered. As a result, AI music continues to enter the market with little to no accurate metadata about how it was created, who owns it or what its legal status is. 

ADVERTISEMENT

This lack of clarity imposes a serious threat to the infrastructure that sustains the music industry economy. At a time when building a sustainable career as an artist, musician or songwriter is already more difficult than ever, this represents yet another massive challenge. PROs, DSPs, music publishers, record labels and digital distributors all depend on accurate metadata to properly allocate royalties. When a track’s origin is unclear, the system breaks down: payments go unmade, or worse, end up in the hands of bad actors gaming the system. Now multiply that by the virtually limitless volume of AI-generated music, and we’re staring down a full-blown crisis. 

Metadata is the DNA of music. It contains essential information — songwriters, performers, publishers, ISRC codes, ISWC codes — that allows works to be identified, tracked, monetized and ultimately paid on. Unfortunately, the music industry still has massive data gaps for millions of human-generated works. With the arrival of AI-generated music at a global scale, that gap is rapidly widening into a chasm. 

Related

Follow the money, licensing AI training rights

To future-proof the industry, we need new metadata standards that clearly indicate whether a work is human made, AI-assisted, or fully AI-generated. This added layer of transparency would benefit everyone in the licensing ecosystem: publishers, labels, DSPs, broadcasters, distributors and beyond. It should also extend to the listening public, so audiences know what they’re engaging with. Implementing this could be as simple as adding a few extra few words to the label copy or credits.

A fair and equitable licensing model goes hand in hand with the new standard for metadata. It’s straightforward: the AI needs songs to train off of, and songs have tremendous value. The pushback is that large-scale licensing often comes with challenges in identifying all the rights holders — multiple songwriters and publishers and hard-to-trace sound recording owners can make the process complex. But AI companies that are creating the most powerful learning technology ever known to man should be able to keep track of what songs are being used to train their models. Furthermore, it’s never been easier to find out who owns the rights to a song.  The music industry has worked tremendously hard on transparency over the years, driven largely by the shift from physical formats to a digital streaming ecosystem and the vast amounts of data that come with it.

AI is moving at a breakneck speed, and the gap between attribution and automation is widening by the day. If we fail to act now, we risk losing the ability to properly document, license and protect music at scale. Once metadata is lost — or never created in the first place — it becomes exponentially harder, if not impossible, to recover. The longer we wait to implement clear standards and guardrails, the more vulnerable human creators become to exploitation and erasure. The time to close the gap is now — before attribution becomes a relic of the past.

Frank Handy is the national chair and Los Angeles chapter president of the Association of Independent Music Publishers (AIMP) and a seasoned music executive with two decades of experience in publishing, royalties, and operations. Currently vice president and head of operations & administration at Position Music, he has overseen global catalogs and worked with artists including The Weeknd, Lorde, and Diplo.


Billboard VIP Pass

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.billboard.com ’

Tags: aiartificial intelligenceGuest ColumnLicensingmetadata
Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Infinity Song INFINITY SONG
Music

Infinity Song Announces New Self-Titled Album

June 5, 2026
Bethel Music’s Jordan Colle Encourages Believers to Trust God’s Timing on New Single ‘Headed My Way’
Music

Bethel Music’s Jordan Colle Encourages Believers to Trust God’s Timing on New Single ‘Headed My Way’

June 5, 2026
Marilyn Manson Loses Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Sex Assault Lawsuit
Music

Marilyn Manson Loses Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Sex Assault Lawsuit

June 5, 2026
Government of Canada wordmark
Music

This Week’s New Tours, Including Sara Bareilles, Violet Grohl and William Prince: June 5, 2026 │ Exclaim!

June 5, 2026
Met Museum’s ‘Musical Bodies’ Blurs Humans and Instruments
Music

Met Museum’s ‘Musical Bodies’ Blurs Humans and Instruments

June 5, 2026
Trump reveals Freedom 250 rally lineup with Lee Greenwood, himself
Music

Trump reveals Freedom 250 rally lineup with Lee Greenwood, himself

June 5, 2026
Next Post
Prince William's Body Language with King Charles Speaks Volumes

Prince William's Body Language with King Charles Speaks Volumes

*exclusive* new york, ny jennifer lawrence is setting a new trend for fall with an earthy red oversized scarf, combining hiking shoes with a birkin bag. pictured: jennifer lawrence backgrid usa 9 october 2025 byline must read: diamond / backgrid usa: +1 310 798 9111 / usasales@backgrid.com uk: +44 208 344 2007 / uksales@backgrid.com *uk clients pictures containing children please pixelate face prior to publication*

Jennifer Lawrence Channels Jane Birkin With a Worn-in Hermès Kelly Bag

Recommended Stories

How to draw figures 🤩 #shorts

How to draw figures 🤩 #shorts

September 24, 2025
August and September community events around Kitsap County

August and September community events around Kitsap County

August 18, 2025
Malcolm tries to talk to Cole about his abilities in The Sixth Sense

Why Toni Collette Had No Clue The Sixth Sense Was A Horror Movie While Shooting It

October 28, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

My fav artist turned to AI :(

My fav artist turned to AI :(

June 5, 2026
Infinity Song INFINITY SONG

Infinity Song Announces New Self-Titled Album

June 5, 2026
Lady Pamela Hicks, Queen's former lady-in-waiting, dies aged 97

Lady Pamela Hicks, Queen’s former lady-in-waiting, dies aged 97

June 5, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land