Upload song -> Get Music Video
THAT'S IT - AI does the work - that's the goal.
GuiWriter currently takes lyrical and vocal techniques and turns your concept into something real. Not your standard Pop song (it does pop, chill). It gives you the styles (genres) to put in the box as well as lyrics that MATCH the sonic journey @suno works with.
There are 10-stages to writing a good song. GuiWriter has 18. My audio-visualizer takes a full .wav and makes these videos.
https://t.co/QT5prmTJiU
https://t.co/xcDPewZuA6
@CaptionFit@suno@NousResearch Ooh - you @CaptionFit wanna be MY competitor?
You're wrong. These are songs I downloaded from v4 - lyrics are lost in a 24k+ catalog. (until @suno gets their search right)
@GamerLXXXVI@pablo_marcolini@ClownWorld Nah I was a PPJ manager. The aprons, shirt, and hat are mandatory and given on day 0 to hires. If your store didn't give them out it's because that store was badly managed.
Gloves and Bacteria comment are 💯
@Semper_Viventem You aren't a copyright holder of that code either.
https://t.co/usI7DxeQeW
Using VSCode doesn't change if you can copyright your code. Using claude does.
@outsource_ Putting WSL2 on its own NVMe gave me huge gains. It also makes Windows <-> WSL bridging much smoother without the UNC nonsense.
Highly recommend doing that w/ the RAM upgrade. Especially if you're running local models.
@brett_lamy@Semper_Viventem Your fallacy depends on the policy of the business, not the law of the country. It's completely backwards.
It's also weird for someone in Tech to argue against copyright protection when they use OSS licensing. 🙃
@brett_lamy@Semper_Viventem Actually - it depends on how much you touched it and the code generated depends on the platform policy.
If you use your own skills and flows... arguably copyright may be granted. Out of the box, sure not copyrightable.
Video game lawyer Haley MacLean discussed concerns regarding Unreal Engine 6's generative AI integration.
It could give publishers leverage to void contracts with developers: https://t.co/4vqValwjGa
Video by @MinnMaxShow
Don't believe me? The first case is 1992 Rogers vs Koons. A sculpture replica was claimed as infringment of a picture.
This was before courts accepted Transformative works.
In 2006 Blanch vs Koons - Koons won using a photographers image of legs in his collage-style painting.