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dc.contributor.advisorDuckworth, Richard
dc.contributor.advisorAdams, Martin
dc.contributor.authorClancy, Martin
dc.date.accessioned2021-01-29T15:36:34Z
dc.date.available2021-01-29T15:36:34Z
dc.date.submitted2021
dc.identifier.citationClancy, Martin, Reflections on the Financial and Ethical Implications of Music Generated by Artificial Intelligence, Trinity College Dublin.School of Creative Arts, 2021en
dc.description.abstractThis work analyses the financial and ethical implications of music generated by Artificial Intelligence (AI). The primary concern of this work relates to issues of employment in the music industry challenged by AI technologies. A theoretical model of the ‘music ecosystem’ (containing philosophical contributions including ANT, UN SDGs and posthumanities) was developed to address this concern and to study the complex engagement with AI technologies among different actors. AI music actors comprise three sectors: the academy, transnational corporations, and start-up companies. The interlinked economic consequences of the creation and exploitation of intellectual property (IP) by these sectors on the music ecosystem were examined. To explore the legal complexities offered by AI music products and services, concepts of legal personhood for AI, the status of non-human actors and relevant legal cases were presented. It led to an observation that music copyright is not currently capable of responding to the financial implications of AI. The work argues, instead, an equitable approach can only occur through an ethical response from stakeholders of the music ecosystem. To examine this ethical imperative, the thesis explored and built a commonality of socalled ‘human-centred’ ethical principles communicated in the major reports on AI development (including the UN’s, EU’s and IEE’s). A case study of an AI music start-up then showed how real-world frameworks can broker the financial and ethical entanglements of AI in an equitable and pragmatic context. The thesis concludes that a globally recognised and legislatively enforceable AI ‘music mark’ can be an important part of actionable proposals that support a sustainable music ecosystem for all its human and non-human members.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.subjectArtificial intelligenceen
dc.subjectAIen
dc.subjectMusic ecosystemen
dc.subjectMusic industryen
dc.subjectUN SDGsen
dc.subjectPosthumanismen
dc.subjectTranshumanismen
dc.subjectIntellectual propertyen
dc.subjectMusic copyrighten
dc.subjectLegal personhooden
dc.subjectAI ethicsen
dc.subjectComputer creativityen
dc.subjectJacques Attalien
dc.subjectIEEE EADen
dc.subjectMusic technologyen
dc.subjectCopyright infringementen
dc.subjectNovaceneen
dc.subjectRay Kurzweilen
dc.subjectMachine learningen
dc.subjectDeep learningen
dc.subjectDeepMinden
dc.subjectSophia Androiden
dc.subjectArticle 13en
dc.subjectThe value gapen
dc.subjectGoogle Magentaen
dc.subjectIBM Deep Blueen
dc.subjectSony Flow Machinesen
dc.subjectTikToken
dc.subjectDJen
dc.subjectAbletonen
dc.subjectDavid Copeen
dc.subjectFrancisco Vicoen
dc.subjectGil Weinbergen
dc.subjectEmily Howellen
dc.subjectJames Lovelocken
dc.subjectNarrow AIen
dc.subjectAGIen
dc.subjectSuperintelligenceen
dc.subjectConcurrent Neural Networksen
dc.subjectMartin Heideggeren
dc.subjectThe Singularityen
dc.subjectActor-Network Theoryen
dc.subjectBruno Latouren
dc.subjectTencenten
dc.subjectJukedecken
dc.subjectMusic authenticityen
dc.titleReflections on the Financial and Ethical Implications of Music Generated by Artificial Intelligenceen
dc.typeThesisen
dc.publisher.institutionTrinity College Dublin. School of Creative Arts. Discipline of Musicen
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoralen
dc.type.qualificationnameDoctor of Philosophyen
dc.rights.ecaccessrightsopenAccess
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2262/94880


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