Straight answers to the copyright and IP questions creators ask most. No legal jargon — just what you need to know before you publish.
Paid Creator and Pro subscribers receive a royalty-free commercial license on every track they generate. You can use tracks in:
No royalty payments. No per-use fees. No additional paperwork.
Your royalty-free commercial license covers paid advertising: Meta Ads, Google Ads, YouTube pre-rolls, TV spots, radio, and any other paid media. No sync license required.
Free tier tracks may not be used in paid advertising. Upgrade to Creator or Pro before generating tracks for ad use.
Creator and Pro subscribers can include DeTonic tracks in paid client work — video production, content packages, brand campaigns, etc. You may charge for your services.
However: you cannot sell or sub-license the raw audio track itself as a standalone music product (e.g., uploading to a stock music marketplace and selling it per-download). The license is for your use in your projects, not for resale of the underlying audio.
Enterprise customers can negotiate white-label and resale rights. Contact support@detonic.app.
YouTube monetization (AdSense): Yes. You can enable monetization on videos using DeTonic tracks as background music. The track itself is not registered in Content ID, so you won't be blocked — but read the Content ID question below for nuance.
Spotify / streaming platforms: You can upload content that features a DeTonic track, but you cannot distribute the track as a standalone release under your name as a composer, because AI-generated tracks don't qualify for copyright registration. Distributor policies vary — some platforms are beginning to require AI disclosure. Check your distributor's terms.
What you cannot do: Register the track with a PRO (ASCAP, BMI, SESAC) or claim performance royalties as the composer. The track has no copyright owner eligible for royalties.
The U.S. Copyright Office has ruled that works produced entirely by AI without sufficient human creative authorship are not eligible for copyright registration. A generated track you receive from DeTonic is not copyrightable as-is.
This doesn't affect your commercial use rights — you still have a full royalty-free license to use the track. It just means you can't register it as your original work or sue others for copying it.
This legal landscape is actively evolving. Courts and the Copyright Office may develop new guidance as AI-generated content becomes more common.
DeTonic does not assert any copyright ownership over Generated Tracks. We will not claim royalties, block your commercial use, or assert rights over tracks you've generated on the platform.
We retain the right to use anonymized generation data to improve the synthesis engine — but that's not the same as claiming ownership of your output.
The U.S. Copyright Office currently rejects applications for works generated entirely by AI. Other major jurisdictions (EU, UK) have similar stances or are developing them.
Attempting to register an AI-generated track as human-authored original work constitutes a fraudulent application and could expose you to legal liability.
DeTonic cannot register copyright on your behalf — and doing so wouldn't be legally valid regardless.
Pro and Enterprise subscribers can export individual stems (drums, bass, melody, etc.) from the voiceover studio.
Stems are subject to the same license as the full track — royalty-free for your own use, but not for resale as standalone audio files. Enterprise customers can negotiate custom terms for stem licensing.
Our copyright evasion filter screens every prompt against 150+ known artist style signatures and blocks generation attempts that closely mimic specific copyrighted recordings. The synthesis engine produces original compositions, not reproductions.
That said, genre conventions (chord progressions, tempos, rhythmic patterns) are not copyrightable — and music can sound stylistically similar without infringing. Two tracks can have the same key, tempo, and general vibe without either being a copy of the other.
If a generated track sounds similar to a song you know, it's almost certainly coincidental genre convergence, not infringement. But if you're using a track in a high-visibility commercial context, listening critically before publishing is always good practice.
DeTonic tracks are not registered in YouTube Content ID or any other audio fingerprinting database. This means no one at DeTonic will ever claim your video.
However, Content ID works by comparing audio against a massive database of registered tracks. Algorithmically generated music can occasionally produce brief patterns that coincidentally match something already in that database — resulting in a false-positive claim from a third party who registered similar-sounding music.
This is rare, but it happens with any music generation tool. It's not actual copyright infringement — it's an algorithm quirk.
If you get a false-positive claim:
Most false-positive claims are resolved within YouTube's standard 30-day dispute window.
DeTonic's synthesis engine is parameterized by mood, genre, tempo, and duration. Similar inputs can produce similar-sounding outputs. We do not guarantee exclusive ownership of any generated track.
This is the same model as stock music libraries — many creators can use the same library track. What matters is your right to use the track, not exclusive ownership of the audio.
If exclusivity is essential for your project (e.g., a brand that needs a unique sonic identity), consider Enterprise — we can discuss custom arrangements. Contact support@detonic.app.
If you receive a DMCA takedown on content that uses a DeTonic-generated track and you believe it's incorrect, you can file a counter-notification. Here's the process:
For the full DMCA process — including what to include in a counter-notification — see Section 13 of our Terms of Service.
Our team can help with specific licensing questions, DMCA documentation, or Enterprise use cases.
Email support@detonic.app