Challenge by Hype and Friends
How might we imagine the futures of music ecosystems?
?
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Join us in this exciting challenge to push the boundaries of what's possible in the world of music ecosystems. Your ideas could shape the future of music and inspire the next wave of technological innovation in the industry.

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Challenge by Hype and Friends
How might we imagine the futures of music ecosystems?
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Challenge by Hype and Friends
How might we imagine the futures of music ecosystems?
Peter
In some areas of music creation, AI will replace human labour (production music, mastering ...).
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
How would it afect to the jon creation or even the job sustainability in the music industry ?
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Barbora Mikolášiková
It might be used as a database of workers in the music ecosystem.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
'Faraday cage' you're technologies will be developed to restrict internet access to physical spaces as mechanisms to exclude Internet access
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
xyz
I see a future where embodied AI lets us control physical instruments more accurately
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
The future will be great!
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Barbora Mikolášiková
More structured and connected world of music, that is well balanced.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Tianshu
I'm concerned that it will limit creators' innovativeness. For example, the creator uses the ai as an aid and is subconsciously guided by the help provided by the ai, i.e., the creator thinks he/she creates the music, but in reality this innovation is invisibly controlled and constructed by the ai.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Eva
Monetization of creative work through and with AI will become difficult if we allow the big four DSPs that deliver Gen AI and AI tools to monoplize further
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Andreas M
AI will challenge the need for mixing/mastering technicians in music production
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of AI is used to enhance the infostructure of small music ecosystems
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
detlef
ai will flood the interet with bad music. ai will help people to become music creatives. ai democratizes the creation of music. ai causes essential legeslative problems. ai will strengthen the meaning of live music and economic impact of live music. ai will questions the general value of music.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Jelena
Augmentation of Processing and Perceptions
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
AI could become a useful tool to make music education more easily accessible.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Dirk Claassen
It will possibly be more and more difficult to compose a piece of music. New work will have to be very original, outstanding in every aspect and reflecting new ideas to beat AI by just a few weeks.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
The future of music ecosystems might not be driven by traditional artists anymore.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
If believe if AI IP legal personhood can be agreed AI generated works can be licensed using the existing IP legal system. AI can also be used to improve the accuracy of music works data and credits to resolve the existing enormous information gaps
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Music used to accompany visual media will be almost exclusively composed by generative AI systems.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
There will be a fusion of human and AI creativity.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Barbora Mikolášiková
Not enough room for creativity fo humans.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Music creation will to a larger degree back to amateur creativity, driven rather by a need and pleasure of self-expression, than business goals.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Barbora Mikolášiková
A lot of generated content that is just generated to have content without having any informational value to it.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of AI will take all creative industry jobs
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Barbora Mikolášiková
Hopefully it will help us with organisation of our time, people and resources.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Dennis Collopy
I see a future where all new creative works are easily available , licensed and monetised in real time with all the different participants accurately and equitably credited and rewarded.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Sotos Kourtellaris
Future ecosystems are not driven by discriminatory values and institutions that exclude social minorities.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
I do worry that AI will take away people‘s jobs.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
AI will be part of our everyday life.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Guy Morrow
I would like to imagine a future that involves a more decentralised music business/ecology as opposed to an increasingly centralised one as is the case.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Martin
The future is here
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Peter
AI will dramatically change music ecosystem's IP system.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
xyz
AI might be a driver for including musical novices into creative processes
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Peter
AI will be ubiquitous in creating music.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
More men, les female. Even less Genderequality and More need of idividuality
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Musicians (or actors in the music ecosystem overall) will be able to work and publish more indepently from other actors, while depending more on the accessibility and abilities of AI (and the pricing policies of the companies, who made the ai programs)
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
AI is another huge disruption on the music ecosystem with major impacts on music creators monetization and copyright regulations. The data supplied to AI need to be regulated and licensed.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
The future of music can involve a move towards rebuilding stronger local communities and micro music ecosystems.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Barbora Mikolášiková
AI will help us be more creative and help us with bureaucratic weight that is over us right now.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
That all my data will be used to train AI without my consent.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Barbora Mikolášiková
I fear that the AI will steal the room for creativity from us.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Transglobal advertising corporations will see an increase in profits.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of music ecosystems around AI, supports local communities and creates economic and cultural cohesion
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Eva
Hypercreatives using all types of AI for their daily creative work
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Peter
AI will increase the value of music rights.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of music ecosystems in the age of AI is not centred around exploitation
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
There will be a reactionary counter movement, where people want authentic human created music. This may add to localised live music scenes vibrance.
1/2
How certain do you find this?
uncertain
certain
How desirable do you find this?
undesirable
desirable
Submit
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Get an overview of the results by reading the AI-generated summaries. For more details, examine the individual opinions and their ratings on the Futures Canvas.
Social
5 Ratings
Anonymous
The future will be great!
65% certain
28% disagreement
93% desirable
12% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Barbora Mikolášiková
More structured and connected world of music, that is well balanced.
41% certain
22% disagreement
80% desirable
11% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Jelena
Augmentation of Processing and Perceptions
75% certain
20% disagreement
51% desirable
33% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Anonymous
AI could become a useful tool to make music education more easily accessible.
78% certain
32% disagreement
76% desirable
24% disagreement
Technological
6 Ratings
Dennis Collopy
I see a future where all new creative works are easily available , licensed and monetised in real time with all the different participants accurately and equitably credited and rewarded.
64% certain
33% disagreement
92% desirable
8% disagreement
Social
5 Ratings
Sotos Kourtellaris
Future ecosystems are not driven by discriminatory values and institutions that exclude social minorities.
41% certain
41% disagreement
97% desirable
5% disagreement
Technological
7 Ratings
Anonymous
I do worry that AI will take away people‘s jobs.
73% certain
26% disagreement
20% desirable
33% disagreement
Social
7 Ratings
Anonymous
The future of music can involve a move towards rebuilding stronger local communities and micro music ecosystems.
52% certain
23% disagreement
91% desirable
8% disagreement
Technological
7 Ratings
Anonymous
AI will be part of our everyday life.
99% certain
2% disagreement
58% desirable
27% disagreement
Technological
8 Ratings
Barbora Mikolášiková
AI will help us be more creative and help us with bureaucratic weight that is over us right now.
62% certain
32% disagreement
89% desirable
10% disagreement
Technological
8 Ratings
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of music ecosystems in the age of AI is not centred around exploitation
38% certain
27% disagreement
69% desirable
41% disagreement
Economic
4 Ratings
Anonymous
How would it afect to the jon creation or even the job sustainability in the music industry ?
75% certain
17% disagreement
40% desirable
26% disagreement
Technological
7 Ratings
Anonymous
That all my data will be used to train AI without my consent.
90% certain
6% disagreement
15% desirable
33% disagreement
Technological
8 Ratings
Barbora Mikolášiková
I fear that the AI will steal the room for creativity from us.
55% certain
27% disagreement
15% desirable
29% disagreement
Social
7 Ratings
Anonymous
There will be a reactionary counter movement, where people want authentic human created music. This may add to localised live music scenes vibrance.
71% certain
28% disagreement
82% desirable
16% disagreement
Social
7 Ratings
Guy Morrow
I would like to imagine a future that involves a more decentralised music business/ecology as opposed to an increasingly centralised one as is the case.
45% certain
32% disagreement
95% desirable
6% disagreement
Economic
6 Ratings
Anonymous
Transglobal advertising corporations will see an increase in profits.
80% certain
11% disagreement
9% desirable
9% disagreement
Economic
6 Ratings
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of music ecosystems around AI, supports local communities and creates economic and cultural cohesion
22% certain
24% disagreement
71% desirable
32% disagreement
Technological
6 Ratings
Martin
The future is here
82% certain
19% disagreement
59% desirable
23% disagreement
Technological
6 Ratings
Dirk Claassen
It will possibly be more and more difficult to compose a piece of music. New work will have to be very original, outstanding in every aspect and reflecting new ideas to beat AI by just a few weeks.
93% certain
7% disagreement
33% desirable
33% disagreement
Technological
6 Ratings
Peter
AI will dramatically change music ecosystem's IP system.
94% certain
6% disagreement
45% desirable
38% disagreement
Social
5 Ratings
Anonymous
The future of music ecosystems might not be driven by traditional artists anymore.
73% certain
8% disagreement
8% desirable
7% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
xyz
AI might be a driver for including musical novices into creative processes
78% certain
14% disagreement
63% desirable
26% disagreement
Technological
6 Ratings
Eva
Hypercreatives using all types of AI for their daily creative work
88% certain
9% disagreement
56% desirable
24% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Peter
AI will be ubiquitous in creating music.
87% certain
13% disagreement
32% desirable
30% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Anonymous
If believe if AI IP legal personhood can be agreed AI generated works can be licensed using the existing IP legal system. AI can also be used to improve the accuracy of music works data and credits to resolve the existing enormous information gaps
75% certain
7% disagreement
47% desirable
33% disagreement
Social
5 Ratings
Anonymous
More men, les female. Even less Genderequality and More need of idividuality
64% certain
28% disagreement
11% desirable
6% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Tianshu
I'm concerned that it will limit creators' innovativeness. For example, the creator uses the ai as an aid and is subconsciously guided by the help provided by the ai, i.e., the creator thinks he/she creates the music, but in reality this innovation is invisibly controlled and constructed by the ai.
78% certain
25% disagreement
4% desirable
9% disagreement
Technological
6 Ratings
Anonymous
Music used to accompany visual media will be almost exclusively composed by generative AI systems.
91% certain
10% disagreement
17% desirable
17% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Anonymous
There will be a fusion of human and AI creativity.
93% certain
15% disagreement
67% desirable
9% disagreement
Technological
6 Ratings
Peter
AI will increase the value of music rights.
34% certain
33% disagreement
42% desirable
27% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Barbora Mikolášiková
Not enough room for creativity fo humans.
90% certain
6% disagreement
5% desirable
10% disagreement
Social
6 Ratings
Anonymous
Music creation will to a larger degree back to amateur creativity, driven rather by a need and pleasure of self-expression, than business goals.
72% certain
22% disagreement
74% desirable
34% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Anonymous
Musicians (or actors in the music ecosystem overall) will be able to work and publish more indepently from other actors, while depending more on the accessibility and abilities of AI (and the pricing policies of the companies, who made the ai programs)
74% certain
9% disagreement
47% desirable
22% disagreement
Technological
4 Ratings
Eva
Monetization of creative work through and with AI will become difficult if we allow the big four DSPs that deliver Gen AI and AI tools to monoplize further
74% certain
29% disagreement
12% desirable
14% disagreement
Social
5 Ratings
Barbora Mikolášiková
A lot of generated content that is just generated to have content without having any informational value to it.
89% certain
10% disagreement
1% desirable
3% disagreement
Technological
4 Ratings
Andreas M
AI will challenge the need for mixing/mastering technicians in music production
87% certain
13% disagreement
5% desirable
5% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of AI will take all creative industry jobs
27% certain
24% disagreement
0% desirable
0% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Anonymous
AI is another huge disruption on the music ecosystem with major impacts on music creators monetization and copyright regulations. The data supplied to AI need to be regulated and licensed.
84% certain
25% disagreement
58% desirable
47% disagreement
Technological
5 Ratings
Barbora Mikolášiková
Hopefully it will help us with organisation of our time, people and resources.
74% certain
16% disagreement
76% desirable
17% disagreement
Technological
4 Ratings
Barbora Mikolášiková
It might be used as a database of workers in the music ecosystem.
78% certain
18% disagreement
66% desirable
30% disagreement
Technological
4 Ratings
Anonymous
'Faraday cage' you're technologies will be developed to restrict internet access to physical spaces as mechanisms to exclude Internet access
36% certain
21% disagreement
36% desirable
20% disagreement
Technological
4 Ratings
xyz
I see a future where embodied AI lets us control physical instruments more accurately
72% certain
8% disagreement
66% desirable
14% disagreement
Technological
4 Ratings
Sotos Kourtellaris
The future of AI is used to enhance the infostructure of small music ecosystems
78% certain
23% disagreement
76% desirable
18% disagreement
Technological
3 Ratings
Peter
In some areas of music creation, AI will replace human labour (production music, mastering ...).
95% certain
4% disagreement
24% desirable
33% disagreement
Technological
4 Ratings
detlef
ai will flood the interet with bad music. ai will help people to become music creatives. ai democratizes the creation of music. ai causes essential legeslative problems. ai will strengthen the meaning of live music and economic impact of live music. ai will questions the general value of music.
65% certain
25% disagreement
27% desirable
15% disagreement
certain
uncertain
desirable
undesirable
Positive Expectations
Hopeful Dreams
Distant Threats
Expected Challenges
46 Opinions
251 Ratings
Resulting future scenarios
Based on their ratings, submitted opinions have been compiled into four distinct future scenarios, autonomously generated by artificial intelligence.
Positive Expectations
AI: The Future of Music Industry
Expected Challenges
AI: Innovation or Threat to Music Industry?
Hopeful Dreams
AI Revolutionizing Future Music Industry
Distant Threats
AI and Music Rights: Industrys Paradigm Shift

AI: The Future of Music Industry

Based on 18 opinions and 100 ratings.
View individual opinions in the Futures Canvas by filtering for the sector "Positive Expectations".
  • AI could transform music industry by making music education accessible and facilitating creative process for novices.
  • AI might ensure fair credit and reward distribution by monetizing creative works in real time.
  • Despite benefits, AI's disruption could challenge music creators' monetization and copyright, requiring strict data regulation.

In the future, the music industry could be transformed by the integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI), facilitating more accessible music education and driving the inclusion of novices in the creative process. AI might be harnessed as a tool to make creative works available, licensed, and monetized in real time, ensuring accurate and equitable credit and reward distribution. The influence of AI could also extend to the revival of local music ecosystems and communities, fostering a blend of AI-assisted and human-driven creativity.

However, a potential counter-movement might surge, advocating for authentic human-created music and adding vibrancy to local live music scenes. AI might also alleviate bureaucratic burdens, aiding in the organization of time, people, and resources. AI could play a significant role in the music ecosystem, from acting as a database of workers to controlling physical instruments more precisely.

However, amid the benefits, AI's disruption of the music ecosystem could pose challenges for music creators' monetization and copyright regulations. Therefore, the data supplied to AI might require strict regulation and licensing. Ultimately, the future of AI in music could swing between enhancing small music ecosystems' infrastructure and rekindling amateur creativity driven by self-expression rather than business objectives.

AI: Innovation or Threat to Music Industry?

Based on 20 opinions and 105 ratings.
View individual opinions in the Futures Canvas by filtering for the sector "Expected Challenges".
  • AI could transform music industry, possibly monopolizing creativity and threatening traditional roles.
  • AI's ubiquity may shift the industry's IP system, necessitating legislative adaptations.
  • Despite potential issues, AI might democratize music creation and enhance live music's significance.

In the future, AI might drastically transform the music industry, leading to both potential benefits and concerns. It could possibly monopolize creativity and job sustainability, restricting human innovation and threatening traditional roles within the industry. The fear is that AI-generated music could minimize the need for human composers and even mixing/mastering technicians, leading to a high volume of content with questionable informational value. This may well cause an oversaturation of music online, challenging the intrinsic value of music itself.

AI's ubiquity in music creation could potentially shift the industry's IP system and necessitate legislative adaptations. If legal personhood for AI is established, AI-generated works could fit within the existing IP legal system, closing information gaps and improving accuracy of music data and credits.

However, the rise of AI might also democratize music creation, enabling more individuals to become music creatives. This could lead to a shift away from traditional artists driving music ecosystems, with artists gaining more independence from other industry actors. But it might simultaneously raise the concern of gender inequality, requiring more emphasis on individuality. Despite potential challenges, the use of AI could enhance the significance and economic impact of live music in contrast to AI-generated compositions.

AI Revolutionizing Future Music Industry

Based on 6 opinions and 35 ratings.
View individual opinions in the Futures Canvas by filtering for the sector "Hopeful Dreams".
  • Future music world could be more balanced, interconnected, reducing traditional biases.
  • AI could lead to mutual growth in music ecosystems, replacing exploitation.
  • AI's role could transform music into more equal, inclusive, and sustainable environments.

In the future world of music, we could see a more organized, interconnected landscape that upholds balance and equality. This might eliminate institutional biases that traditionally marginalize certain social groups. In an AI-driven era, music ecosystems could potentially revolve not around exploitation, but mutual growth and support. A decentralised model might overtake the existing centralized approach to the music business, leading to an environmentally friendly music industry. The advent of AI could further empower small music ecosystems, aiding them in enhancing their infostructure. The future could also see AI fostering economic and cultural cohesion by supporting local music communities. This paints a future scenario where AI plays a pivotal role in transforming music ecosystems into more equal, inclusive, and sustainable environments.

AI and Music Rights: Industrys Paradigm Shift

Based on 3 opinions and 15 ratings.
View individual opinions in the Futures Canvas by filtering for the sector "Distant Threats".
  • Music rights value may increase due to AI advancements, altering the music industry's economic model.
  • AI technologies could revolutionize the creative industry, changing skills and job roles.
  • Future internet accessibility may shift, with a move towards controlled digital ecosystems intertwining physical and digital spaces.

In the impending future, the value of music rights could witness a significant boost due to advancements in artificial intelligence (AI). This suggests a potential paradigm shift in the music industry, redefining its economic model. Simultaneously, AI might also lead to a revolution in the creative industry workforce. The advent of increasingly sophisticated AI technologies could render human creativity in these fields obsolete, necessitating the evolution of skills and job roles to remain relevant.

Further into the future, a marked shift in internet accessibility might be observed. Novel technologies modeled after the 'Faraday Cage' concept could be developed to restrict internet access to specific physical spaces. These technologies might be used as mechanisms to deliberately exclude internet access, reshaping digital connectivity norms. This implies a potential transformation towards a more controlled digital ecosystem, with physical and digital spaces becoming more intertwined than ever. Future societies might have to navigate these complex dynamics, balancing progress with privacy and freedom of information.

Thank you for your participation!