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Singaporean artist Stefanie Sun feels under threat from AI clones

Singaporean artist Stefanie Sun feels under threat from AI clones



Stefanie Sun is a popular Singaporean singer whose last studio album was released in 2017, although she’s still an active artist. However, in China she’s now becoming an unwilling guinea pig in the latest wave of experiments with AI voice-cloning technologies.To get more news about stefanie sun, you can visit shine news official website.

The South China Morning Post reported on how a raft of ‘AI-Sun Yanzi’ accounts on social media have been releasing cover versions of other artists’ songs using AI clones of Sun’s voice.

“My fans have officially switched sides and accepted that I am indeed ‘an unpopular singer’ while my AI persona is the current hot property. I mean really, how do you fight with someone who is putting out new albums every few minutes,” said Sun in a social post, according to the report.

“The very task that we have always convinced ourselves; that the formation of thought or opinion is not replicable by robots, the very idea that this is beyond their league, is now the looming thing that will threaten thousands of human conjured jobs. Legal, medical, accountancy, and currently, singing a song.”

The key here is consent: or rather the lack of it. Sun is not a willing participant in these experiments.

This isn’t a situation like Holly Herndon or Grimes in the west, where they have created and licensed their own AI voice-clones with a business model that will see them share in the revenues of tracks made using them.
One of the hottest singers on Chinese video platform Bilibili right now is Stefanie Sun. Or is it?

The site has been flooded with covers of songs by various artificial intelligence (AI) versions of Sun, which replicate the 44-year-old Singaporean singer’s voice.

Some of the most-viewed videos of AI Sun are those of her covering the early hits of Taiwanese pop star Jay Chou such as Hair Like Snow (2005), which has 1.9 million views, as well as Love Before BC (2001), which has close to 1.4 million views.

There are even videos of the AI version covering late Japanese singer Koji Wada’s Butter-Fly (1999), the theme song from anime series Digimon Adventure (1999 to 2000).

Sun is not the only star to be digitally recreated. There are also AI versions of Mandopop diva Faye Wong and Singaporean singer JJ Lin.

Lawyers have raised copyright infringement concerns about such AI videos created and disseminated without the artistes’ permission.

According to Taiwanese media, Sun’s management label is not currently considering legal action due to the lack of regulation regarding AI.

After days of keeping quiet, Sun – who has not released an album since 2017 – issued a response lamenting her AI voice taking over her own, referencing a viral incident in 2021 when she was referred to as an “obscure singer” by a Chinese netizen.

In a post published on Monday (May 22) on her blog Make Music, she muses: “My fans have officially switched sides and accepted that I am indeed an ‘obscure singer’ while my AI persona is the current hot property. I mean really, how do you fight with someone who is putting out new albums in the time span of minutes?”

Raising the possibility of AI taking over human jobs, including her own, she adds: “Whether it is ChatGPT or AI or whatever name you want to call it, this ‘thing’ is now capable of mimicking and/or conjuring unique and complicated content by processing a gazillion chunks of information while piecing and putting (it) together in a most coherent manner.”

While fans may protest that AI Sun lacks the emotion of the real Sun and that they can tell the difference, Sun says: “I suspect that this would be a very short-term response.”

She acknowledges that she may be getting ahead of herself in terms of assuming what AI can do, but points out that it has the potential of creating catered content specific to everyone’s preferences.

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