Interesting. Reminds me that Deezer made an algo to detect AI-made music in order to de monetize them on their streaming platform.
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Deezer has the only accurate indicator that I know of, I use it in a program that prevents AI generated music from being added to my library
I've been waiting for something like this to appear. Not just a "plagiarism detector" but something that actually identifies the data in the training pool that most closely represent a particular AI model output. You could do the same for text and images too, and I'm surprised this is the first one that I've heard of.
I'm not a fan of the MAFIAA but if this type of reverse-search tech can hold AI companies to account then it's a step towards reining them in.
Cool would be that AI products have their own data as sufix in the content that they generate, something like ID3, and we get new AI file extensions, like .aijpg, .aipng, .aimp3, etc.
When it comes to stuff like copyright lawsuits against AI companies, the only way you can fight big money (at least in the US) is with more money.
I remember a guy about 3 years ago trying that grift with images. Went nowhere because the images it flagged as the "source" looked nothing like the generated images. In music, it might be more successful. Marvin Gaye's estate showed the way.
We've heard about it before alright, some students today do deliberate mistakes in their works cause writing phrases correctly flags you as AI by university's anti-AI AI. We will get real artists flagged, I'm sure of it.
Is this "technology" just another AI guessing the likelihood?
~~The article is 5 paragraphs long. Is it really that hard to read it and answer your question?~~ Nevermind, I think I misread your comment. Sorry!
What Sony is specifically trying to do is see if any AI song can be traced to specific songs- e.g., if someone prompted "make me a song in the style of Lady Gaga", would Sony be able to conclusively determine this based on the outputting song?
I am a bit skeptical of this working, but then again, there were some image generators spitting out gettysburg watermarks.
Hmm. What are the chances that they manage to sneak such a fraudulent scheme past courts or lawmakers?
Here's a trick : it sucks.