Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Computing
  4. News

This invisible technique poisons songs so AI can’t clone them

My Music My Choice alters songs so they sound normal to fans but become unusable nonsense when fed into generative AI systems.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Adult, Male, Man
Soundtrap / Unsplash

Last year, AI clones of Bad Bunny and Drake flooded streaming platforms. Listeners couldn’t tell the real tracks from synthetic soundalikes. The music industry has been scrambling for answers ever since.

Researchers at Binghamton University and the startup Cauth AI think they’ve found one. It’s called My Music My Choice, or MMMC, and it works differently from most copyright tools. Instead of catching fakes after they appear, this method lets artists poison their recordings before release. The audio reaches human ears just fine. But voice cloning models hear nothing but garbage.

Here’s how the poisoning actually works

The system targets a song’s waveform. My Music My Choice adds microscopic alterations so subtle that you’ll never notice them. Play the track on Spotify and it sounds exactly like the master recording.

Recommended Videos

But feed that file into cloning software and everything breaks. The shifts confuse the algorithm, making the protected vocals read as a completely different performance. When the tool tries to replicate the voice, it only produces distorted static.

The goal is to minimize the impact on human listeners while maximizing disruption for the machines. Artists could apply this protection during production and release with confidence that cloning software won’t work.

Why last year’s wave made this urgent

Bad Bunny drops a new track and within hours the internet fills with studio-quality versions sung by anyone. Generative AI made that scenario real in 2025. Fans couldn’t tell what was authentic anymore.

Beyond the copyright chaos, artists watched their identities get borrowed without permission. People are using voice cloning for fun but also for nefarious purposes, Ciftci said, grabbing someone’s voice and making them sing things they never would. The emotional toll and lost revenue piled up fast. Musicians needed a way to shut it down before it starts. MMMC finally gives them that.

What’s next for artists and the tool

The team tested MMMC on 150 tracks across multiple genres and plans to scale up. They also want to compare it with similar methods, though they admit there aren’t many out there yet.

For musicians watching this space, the message is clear. Protection is coming before the clone, not after. Watch for wider testing as the team scales up.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Edifier’s new budget headphones put song lyrics on the earcups and I’m confused
The Auro Ace mixes gamer aesthetics with surprisingly decent specs
Edifier Auro Ace Featured

Most budget headphones today look painfully similar. Same safe designs, same recycled “deep bass” marketing, and the same feature checklists. That’s exactly why Edifier’s newly launched Auro Ace immediately stands out, thanks to its animated dot-matrix display built directly into the earcups and a design that clearly prioritizes personality as much as audio.

Edifier’s Auro Ace headphones put lyrics directly on the earcups

Read more
The HomePod mini still makes sense in 2026 if you are already in Apple’s ecosystem
The HomePod mini still works best if you are already deep into Apple’s ecosystem
Indoors, Interior Design, Lamp

The HomePod mini launched as Apple’s smaller and more affordable smart speaker, and on paper, not much has changed since then. The design is the same, the price has stayed consistent, and in 2026, it still looks almost identical to the version Apple introduced years ago.

However, expectations around smart speakers are very different now. Instead of focusing on specs alone, the bigger question is whether the HomePod mini still makes sense in everyday use, especially as competitors continue pushing smarter assistants, better flexibility, and stronger audio at similar prices

Read more
JBL’s new Live 4 earbuds come in three styles and a smarter case with a built-in display
These new earbuds turn the case into a tiny control center
Body Part, Finger, Hand

JBL has updated its Live earbuds lineup with three new models dubbed the Live Buds 4, Live Beam 4, and Live Flex 4. The trio covers different fits, ranging from sealed in-ear buds to a more open stem-style option.

All three models also come with a touchscreen charging case that offers personalization options and quick access to earbud controls usually found inside the JBL Headphones app.

Read more