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Suno users generate Spotify’s entire historical catalog every two weeks, but the company spent just $2,000 on music rights while burning $32M on chips—a financial disparity that signals the end of the recording industry as we know it.
Suno users generate Spotify’s entire historical catalog every two weeks, but the company spent just $2,000 on music rights while burning $32M on chips—a financial disparity that signals the end of the
billboard.com
Suno users generate Spotify’s entire historical catalog every two weeks, but the company spent just $2,000 on music rights while burning $32M on chips—a financial disparity that signals the end of the recording industry as we know it.
Original link unavailable
Suno users generate Spotify’s entire historical catalog every two weeks, but the company spent just $2,000 on music rights while burning $32M on chips—a financial disparity that signals the end of the
billboard.com
Suno users generate Spotify’s entire historical catalog every two weeks, but the company spent just $2,000 on music rights while burning $32M on chips—a financial disparity that signals the end of the recording industry as we know it.
Original link unavailable
Suno users generate Spotify’s entire historical catalog every two weeks, but the company spent just $2,000 on music rights while burning $32M on chips—a financial disparity that signals the end of the
billboard.com
Suno users generate Spotify’s entire historical catalog every two weeks, but the company spent just $2,000 on music rights while burning $32M on chips—a financial disparity that signals the end of the recording industry as we know it.
Original link unavailable