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Investor's Tweet Backfires as Suno Faces Copyright Heat

Investor's Off-Message Tweet Fuels Suno's Copyright Woes

The AI music generation platform Suno finds itself in deeper legal trouble after its lead investor made public comments that directly contradict the company's copyright defense strategy.

A Costly Admission

C.C. Gong, partner at Menlo Ventures (Suno's core investor), recently deleted a tweet that rights holders are calling a smoking gun. While Suno argues its AI-generated music falls under "fair use" as it doesn't compete with original works, Gong wrote on February 26: "I've shifted most of my listening time to Suno because I'm tired of Spotify's repetitive recommendations."

"This is exactly what we've been saying," said Ed Newton-Rex of Fairly Trained, a nonprofit advocating for ethical AI training. "When investors themselves admit they're replacing human-made music with AI outputs, it completely undermines their fair use argument."

The platform already faces multiple legal challenges:

  • Settled with Warner Music last November
  • Lost initial ruling to German rights group GEMA
  • Now facing strengthened "market substitution" claims

Suno CEO Mikey Shulman hasn't helped matters with controversial statements like "most people don't enjoy making music," which many artists find dismissive of creative labor.

The Bigger Picture

With $300 million in annual revenue and 2 million paid users, Suno isn't going anywhere soon. But this case represents more than just legal technicalities - it's becoming a referendum on how we value human creativity in the age of AI.

The timing couldn't be worse for Suno. As courts worldwide grapple with AI copyright issues, having your own investors undermine your case makes an already uphill battle even steeper.

Key Points:

  • Lead investor contradicted Suno's "no market harm" defense in since-deleted tweet
  • Comments strengthen rights holders' arguments about AI substitution effect
  • Comes amid existing lawsuits from major music industry players
  • Case highlights growing tension between AI innovation and creator rights

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