By the way, is mastering using bandlab copyright or copyright free? And what about AI mixing, mastering services? Are they copyright free or copyrighted? And especially according to youtube. I remember many videos saying you can't use AI to record voices on youtube so I'm afraid Bandlab mastering would be considered a copyright violation. If you had experience with it or anybody you know got monetized using bandlab mixing and mastering, I'll be thankful if you confirm with me. Thank you!
@user-zy7li8dq3j Hi, basically, you can only copyright something that you can prove is original. Mixing and mastering are not the kind of thing that would be considered copyrightable. AI mixing or mastering is simply a method of identifying the loudness and tone curve of your song and changing them to a standard setting (normally a standard set by someone like RU-vid or Spotify). AI song creation is a different thing though... This is typically when copyright songs are learnt by the software and used to create new songs. I personally would not use AI song creation software, as it is highly doubtful I would be able to copyright the song and may even end up in breach of someone else's copyright.
@@IbandUK yes I meant AI mixing and mastering tools but not song creation tools So if I'm using AI mixing and mastering software or Bandlab mastering tool on my own songs that I composed and recorded, will it be OK to publish them on RU-vid and other streaming platforms without copyright issues? And what do you think is safer regarding copyright Bandlab tools whether mixing or mastering or AI? And which is higher quality?
@user-zy7li8dq3j Yes it is okay to publish your own songs that have been mixed / mastered in BandLab or using AI software like izotope software. Thousands of songs are released every year that are mastered and mixed this way and I have never heard of anyone ever having a copyright problem (probably because mixing and mastering are not copyrightable). Bandlab mastering / mixing / song creation is okay for RU-vid or publishing on bandlab itself but for audio streaming services like Spotify I would recommend creating / mixing / mastering your songs on a computer in Logic, Pro Tools (intro is free) or Cubase. It takes about 20 years to become really good at mastering, so if you want to go pro, you probably will want to get your songs mastered in a pro recording studio (if you can afford it).
@@IbandUK alright. So Bandlab mastering isn't eligible for streaming platforms but must use logic pro or free tools for mastering if I'm gonna distribute. Right? Thanks a lot for your reply ❤
@user-zy7li8dq3j You can use bandlab mastering for streaming platforms if you want, and no doubt some people do, I'm just saying that you will be competing against songs that have been mastered on industry standard DAWs (like logic, pro tools, cubase), so personally I would want my songs mastered on those DAWs too. It's just my personal opinion though.