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Well, AI has done it again
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The world's first commercial song using quantum power generated artificial intelligence is released
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Let's take a listen! Oh, we're back to me
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Um, very alien disco in a black hole-esque, but hey, someone might be into it
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Recurse, available now on all major streaming platforms. The song was created in collaboration with British electronic musician Ila
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using a quantum computer supplied by Finnish company IQM. Unlike traditional computers, quantum machines are built to solve problems that classical ones can't
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patterns were used by moth system After email provi system builds on it Then that version is processed on a quantum computer to generate the final composition
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There's also an infinite remix that dynamically changes based on listener engagement
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As AI creeps further into creative spaces, from music to writing, it's also landing at the center of legal debate
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especially over how these systems are trained and whether artists' rights are being respected
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On Friday, the U.S. Copyright Office released a new report laying out its stance
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It supports licensing copyrighted works when used in commercial AI training, suggesting that developers must obtain permission before using protected content
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This comes after a policy update in January, which now allows AI-assisted works to be copyrighted as long as a human is the creative driver
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It's a shift from the previous standard, which denied copyright to anything not fully created by a person
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But Hila says she's not worried. She told The Next Web that working with tech like this feels collaborative, not competitive
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With Straight Arrow News, I'm Kennedy Felton. Download our app or visit san.com for more