AI Insights
“AI doesn’t exploit musicians, people do”: What if artificial intelligence doesn’t have to hurt the music industry? – Features

Musician and technologist Imogen Heap also helmed a session at SXSW London on the topic of “Artistry in the Age of AI: Protecting Music’s Integrity”, with a demonstration of Auracles.io – the creator’s digital ID and rights management all-in-one platform which could be seen as a development from her previous community-building project Mycelia. Heap’s work often addresses the problematic aspects of copyright administration, especially for self-managed artists, and of attribution and permission in the context of legal AI-training and other uses of art.
“Using music and AI for good has always been a no brainer!” says Imogen Heap, an AI native user who make her comments together with ChatGPT about fair use of AI and music. “Auracles is the latest manifestation [of my advocacy] to ensure technology genuinely supports artists — largely in reflection as to how little the current industry supports us. Ideally, companies, not just AI, but ALL companies would embrace a system of transparent, artist-approved lightweight data licensing, facilitated through digital ID verification, which would incentivise ethical retraining and ensure fair compensation for creators, as together we build the landscape in tandem, piece by piece.”
She continues, “the essential shift is moving from viewing AI as a threat or a purely commercial tool, to seeing it as a collaborative partner. We need leaders and creators to commit to transparency, ethical responsibility, and genuine cooperation, recognising AI’s potential to augment human creativity rather than replace it.”
Read this next: The rise of AI music: A force for good or a new low for artistic creativity?
Some companies already work with the mindset of AI supporting artists at the core. Take Musical AI, a “rights management platform that ensures fair attribution and compensation for creators by securely tracking rights holders’ contributions to AI-generated music“ as described by co-founder and CEO Sean Power.
If we consider that AI does not really create anything, but rather puts micro bits and pieces together according to learned patterns, we understand the importance of such a tool. “Generative AI is trained to learn the probabilities of patterns in existing data with the objective of outputting stylistic imitations,” Power explains. “First it ‘atomises’ audio into micro-samples and then recombines them, preserving the probabilities in the dataset. [Our] technology is able to break down AI-generated tracks to percentages of influence from original works, enabling transparent reporting and proportional royalty payments to creators.”
Björn Ulvaeus of ABBA, another guest speaker at SXSW London, revealed that “right now [he’s] writing a musical assisted by AI, but it is a misconception that AI can write a whole song, it’s lousy at that, and bad at lyrics as well.” Ulvaeus also added: “AI music generators train on copyrighted material, they train on all the world’s music, and for that we feel that they should be paying something towards the songwriters and artists.” On the same point, Power comments that “generative AI is built on the creative labour of artists, often mined without consent, to produce endless imitations that serve platforms and profits, not people. It’s a form of data laundering, where original music is stripped of its source and repackaged as ‘new’, enabling a massive transfer of wealth and credit from creators to tech companies.”
Power thinks that “AI doesn’t exploit musicians, people do. It’s the AI industry’s responsibility to design ethical systems and refuse to hide bad decisions behind the algorithm.” Similarly to Heap, he states: “What we need is a fundamental shift in power, a move from gatekeeping to stewardship, from appropriation to attribution. A future where creators own their influence, audiences know where the art comes from, and AI is used to enhance human expression, not erase it.”
Wyclef of The Fugees shared a similar view at SXSW London: “I want to tell creators, are we getting lazier because of technology, or are we gonna push the technology forward? The belief has to come from you, there is nobody greater than the creator, which is you.”
AI Insights
AI prompt injection gets real — with macros the latest hidden threat

“Attackers conceal instructions via ultra-small fonts, background-matched text, ASCII smuggling using Unicode Tags, macros that inject payloads at parsing time, and even file metadata (e.g., DOCX custom properties, PDF/XMP, EXIF),” Granoša explained. “These vectors evade human review yet are fully parsed and executed by LLMs, enabling indirect prompt injection.”
Countermeasures
Justin Endres, head of data security at cybersecurity vendor Seclore, argued that security leaders can’t rely on legacy tools alone to defend against malicious prompts that turn “everyday files into Trojan horses for AI systems.”
“[Security leaders] need layered defenses that sanitize content before it ever reaches an AI parser, enforce strict guardrails around model inputs, and keep humans in the loop for critical workflows,” Endres advised. “Otherwise, attackers will be the ones writing the prompts that shape your AI’s behavior.”
AI Insights
Prediction: This $1 Trillion Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Will Be the Next Nvidia

This semiconductor and networking specialist is a force to be reckoned with in the artificial intelligence (AI) space.
Since the dawn of the artificial intelligence (AI) era, a number of players have been at the leading edge of the technology. Perhaps no company has exemplified the vast potential of AI more than Nvidia (NVDA 3.91%). Since early 2023, the chipmaker’s stock has surged more than 1,000% (as of this writing) as its graphics processing units (GPUs) have become the gold standard for facilitating the technology.
However, investors may be surprised to learn that Broadcom (AVGO 10.07%) has actually outperformed Nvidia over the past year, as its stock has soared 149% compared with 63% for Nvidia. Furthermore, several pronouncements by the company during its recent quarterly report suggest that trend is poised to continue.
Let’s look at what’s driving Broadcom’s robust rally and why I predict the company is on track to be the next Nvidia.
Image source: Getty Images.
The next big winner
Nvidia’s GPUs have transformed AI by providing the massive computational horsepower required to power AI models. These lightning-fast chips offer extremely flexible use cases and are unmatched for this purpose, which is why Nvidia has thrived over the past few years.
It’s also no surprise that Broadcom has benefited from the accelerating adoption of AI, as the company’s Ethernet switching and networking products have long been a staple in data centers. However, Broadcom’s application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) have been gaining ground. These custom-designed AI accelerators, which Broadcom calls XPUs, are tailored to specific tasks and therefore more energy efficient. Rapid adoption of this chips has fueled a blistering run for Broadcom stock, which is up more than 500% since early 2023, earning its membership in the $1 trillion club.
In the third quarter, Broadcom generated record revenue that accelerated 22% year over year to $15.9 billion, resulting in adjusted earnings per share (EPS) that jumped 36% to $1.69. The company was clear that it was AI that was driving this train, as its AI-specific revenue accelerated 63% year over year to $5.2 billion. The results were well ahead of Wall Street’s expectations, as analysts’ consensus estimates called for revenue of $15.82 billion and adjusted EPS of $1.66.
For context, in its fiscal 2026 second quarter (ended July 27), Nvidia’s data center segment, driven primarily by AI, grew 56% year over year, down from 73% growth in Q1, which shows its growth is decelerating.
However, it was management’s commentary that gave investors cause to celebrate, as Broadcom delivered two pieces of news that bode well for the future.
First, Broadcom stated that it continues to expand its business with its three biggest hyperscale customers. While the company doesn’t disclose who these customers are, they are widely believed to be Alphabet, Meta Platforms, and TikTok parent ByteDance. During the conference call to discuss the results, CEO Hock Tam said, “We continue to gain share at our three original customers.” He went on to say the company is forecasting its AI-centric growth to be higher next year, accelerating compared to the 50% to 60% growth it expects in 2025.
The other big development was that Broadcom confirmed the addition of a fourth big hyperscale customer, which many analysts believe to be OpenAI. The company said this new client moved from prospect to “qualified customer,” and had approved production of “AI racks based on our XPUs.” As a result, Broadcom boosted its backlog by $10 billion to $110 billion.
The next Nvidia?
Wall Street’s reaction to Broadcom’s results was decidedly bullish, as no fewer than 16 analysts boosted their price targets on the stock. Many of these cited the accelerating demand for Broadcom’s ASICs as a factor.
Ben Reitzes of Melius Research views Broadcom as a “Magnificent Eight” stock, arguing that it should be added to the Magnificent 7 stocks. He goes on to say that he has long believed that Nvidia’s share would fall over time, with Broadcom eventually taking a roughly 30% share of the AI compute market.
That said, Reitzes also believes that a rising tide lifts all boats, and both companies will be massive winners as the adoption of AI continues to gain steam. That said, the analyst points out that over the long term, Nvidia’s CUDA programming library shouldn’t be underestimated, as this software ecosystem is favored by developers and provides Nvidia with a significant competitive advantage.
So while Broadcom will likely be the next Nvidia, the demand for AI continues to climb, and the market will be able to support two major players, so Nvidia and Broadcom will likely both be market-beating investments from here.
From a valuation perspective, the recent spike in Broadcom’s stock price has seen a commensurate increase in its multiple. Broadcom stock is currently selling for 37 times next year’s earnings, compared to 27 for Nvidia. Both are trading for a premium, but both are also well-positioned to profit from the growing adoption of AI.
Danny Vena has positions in Alphabet, Broadcom, Meta Platforms, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Meta Platforms, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends Broadcom. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
AI Insights
Mapping the power of AI across the patient journey

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly transforming clinical care, offering healthcare leaders new tools to improve workflows through automation and enhance patient outcomes with more accurate diagnoses and personalized treatments. This resource provides a framework for understanding how AI is applied across the patient journey, from pre-visit interactions to post‑visit monitoring and ongoing care. It focuses on actionable use cases to help healthcare organizations evaluate AI technologies holistically, balance innovation with feasibility, and navigate the evolving landscape of AI in healthcare.
For a deeper exploration of any specific use case featured in this infographic, check out our comprehensive compendium. It offers detailed insights into these technologies, including their benefits, implementation considerations, and evolving role in healthcare.
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