
Hack suggests AI music generator Suno scraped YouTube for training data
Quick Answer
The AI music generator Suno was hacked, revealing it allegedly scraped audio from YouTube and other platforms for training.
Quick Take
The AI music generator Suno was hacked, revealing it allegedly scraped audio from YouTube and other platforms for training. The breach exposed customer data, including emails and partial credit card numbers, while Suno faces legal challenges from major record labels for potential copyright violations.
Key Points
- Suno reportedly scraped decades of audio from YouTube Music and other platforms.
- The hacker accessed customer data, including emails and partial credit card numbers.
- Suno claims its data usage falls under fair use, but faces lawsuits from record labels.
- Udio, a competitor, is also accused of similar data scraping practices.
- Suno did not inform customers about the breach, calling it a limited incident.
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The AI music generator Suno was hacked, according to a report from 404 Media.
The hacker told the publication that they used a supply chain attack to access an employee’s credentials, allowing them to then access source code showing how Suno allegedly scraped decades of audio from YouTube Music, Deezer, Genius, stock music libraries, and podcast RSS feeds.
Suno previously admitted that it trains its AI on “publicly available music files” on the open internet, arguing that it can train on copyrighted material under the fair use doctrine, a subjective carve out of copyright law. But according to the major record labels actively suing Suno, it is illegal under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to deliberately circumvent YouTube’s protections against data scraping; it also violates YouTube’s terms of service.
Udio, a competitor to Suno, has also been accused of scraping YouTube data. Google, the parent company of YouTube, faces similar allegations of copyright infringement from a variety of major book publishers.
The hacker reportedly accessed customer data including customer emails, phone numbers, and partial credit card numbers in Stripe.
Suno did not notify customers about the November 2025 breach and claims that this was a “limited security incident that was quickly contained.”
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