
Warner Music and Udio Reach Landmark Settlement
In a significant shift for the music industry, Warner Music Group has resolved its copyright infringement lawsuit against AI music generator Udio, announcing a groundbreaking agreement that will transform the platform into a fully licensed service launching in 2026. This settlement marks a pivotal moment in the ongoing relationship between traditional music companies and emerging AI technologies.
The Settlement Details and New Licensing Model
The agreement resolves a lawsuit filed last June when Warner joined Sony Music Entertainment and UMG Recordings in accusing Udio and competitor platform Suno of mass copyright infringement. The labels alleged that these AI companies trained their models on copyrighted recordings without proper authorization.
Transition to Licensed Platform
Under the new arrangement, Udio will completely abandon its current model and develop a subscription-based platform where users can create remixes, covers, and original songs using voices and compositions from participating artists and songwriters. The system will ensure proper licensing, credits, and compensation for all creators involved.
Artist Protections and Compensation
“This partnership is a crucial step towards realizing a future in which technology amplifies creativity and unlocks new opportunities for artists and songwriters,” stated Andrew Sanchez, Udio’s co-founder and CEO. The agreement spans Warner’s recorded music and publishing divisions, creating new revenue streams while implementing robust artist protections.
Broader Industry Implications
The settlement comes at a time when AI music generation faces increasing legal and regulatory scrutiny globally. This agreement could set a precedent for how other AI music platforms approach licensing and artist compensation.
Recent Legal Developments
A German court recently ruled against an AI company for reproducing copyrighted song lyrics, marking the first time a European court found a large language model violated copyright law. The court determined that GPT-4 and GPT-4o contained reproducible lyrics from nine songs, constituting unauthorized reproduction under EU and German copyright law.
The Future of AI Music Creation
Udio will maintain access to its current system during the transition period while rolling out expanded protections and safeguards for artists and songwriters ahead of the 2026 launch. Artists who choose to participate will receive proper credit and payment when users create content using their work, establishing a new framework for AI-assisted music creation that respects intellectual property rights while fostering innovation.



