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WMG resolves Udio lawsuit and secures licensing agreement for futuristic AI music platform set to launch in 2026

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Warner Music Group and AI music platform Udio have struck what they call “a landmark agreement” that resolves the companies’ copyright infringement litigation.

The companies have also entered into a licensing deal for a “next-generation” AIpowered music creation, listening, and discovery platform set to launch next year.

The news arrived just an hour after WMG announced a new partnership with Stability AI on Wednesday (November 19), which the companies say will “advance the use of responsible AI in music creation”.

According to a press release, the agreement with Udio spans WMG’s recorded music and music publishing businesses and “creates new revenue streams for artists and songwriters, while ensuring their work remains protected”.

The settlement and licensing deals come just over a year after the RIAA, on behalf of all three major record companies, sued Udio and rival AI platform Suno for “mass infringement” of copyright.

Universal Music Group also settled with Udio last month, in addition to signing a deal for a licensed AI music platform set to launch in 2026.

The two music companies’ agreements with Udio arrive as the majors, along with entities such as Denmark’s Koda and Germany’s GEMA, continue to pursue copyright claims against Suno.

Suno announced just today that it has raised $250 million at a $2.45 billion valuation. The platform is also generating $200 million in annual revenue.

Udio said today that its reimagined subscription service “will introduce a suite of creative experiences that enable users to make remixes, covers, and new songs using the voices of artists and compositions of songwriters who choose to participate, while ensuring artists and songwriters are credited and paid”.

Ahead of the launch, Udio also plans to roll out what it “expanded protections and other measures designed to safeguard the rights of artists and songwriters”.

“We’re unwaveringly committed to the protection of the rights of our artists and songwriters, and Udio has taken meaningful steps to ensure that the music on its service will be authorized and licensed.”

Robert Kyncl, WMG

Robert Kyncl, CEO, WMG said: “We’re unwaveringly committed to the protection of the rights of our artists and songwriters, and Udio has taken meaningful steps to ensure that the music on its service will be authorized and licensed.

“This collaboration aligns with our broader efforts to responsibly unlock AI’s potential – fueling new creative and commercial possibilities while continuing to deliver innovative experiences for fans.”

Andrew Sanchez, Co-Founder and CEO of Udio, added: “Collaborating with WMG marks a significant milestone in our mission to redefine how AI and the music industry evolve together.

“This partnership is a crucial step towards realizing a future in which technology amplifies creativity and unlocks new opportunities for artists and songwriters. Our new platform will enable experiences where fans can create alongside their favorite artists and make extraordinary music in an environment that offers artists control and connection. ]

“We’re absolutely thrilled to be working with WMG in creating this new future.”

According to today’s announcement, Udio’s new platform represents a “significant evolution” for the company, shifting its focus “to a platform built in collaboration with artists and songwriters”.

The announcement added that “to support a smooth transition, Udio will continue providing access to its current, closed-system” as it “transitions into serving fully-licensed applications in 2026”.

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Australian Surfer Brothers Murdered in Mexico; Woman Sentenced to 20 Years in Prison

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A woman has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for her role in the murders of three tourists during a carjacking in Mexico last year.

Ari Gisell, 23, pleaded guilty to instigating the violent assault on Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson and their American friend Carter Rhoad, who were on a surfing trip in the northern Mexican state of Baja California in April 2024 when they disappeared.

Their bodies were later found with gunshot wounds to the head at the bottom of a deep well.

Ari Gisell had expressed interest in the tyres on the surfers’ car and told her then-boyfriend Jesús Gerardo to “bring me a good phone and good tyres for my pickup truck”, the court heard.

The surnames of the defendants are not being revealed in the court, in line with Mexican court reporting rules.

Jesús Gerardo and two others, Irineo Francisco and Ángel Jesús, tailed the vehicle to the campsite where the foreigners were staying, then robbed them before shooting them dead. The cases against these three men are still before the courts.

According to Mexican newspaper La Silla Rota, Jesús Gerardo and Irineo Francisco have ties with the powerful drug cartel Sinaloa, which was for many years led by the notorious drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.

Because of these links, both men are being held in El Hongo, a maximum-security prison in Baja California. Ángel Jesús has been detained in a separate facility in the city of Ensenada.

Prosecutors do not suspect any connections between the murders and organised crime, however, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).

The victims’ families, who appeared via video conference, made emotional statements at the hearing on Wednesday.

“We dreamed of seeing them grow older, of having children. That’s all taken now,” said Callum and Jake’s mother Debra Robinson, as reported by ABC.

“We live with their absence.”

Callum Robinson, 33, was a member of Australia’s national lacrosse team and was living in San Diego, just across the US-Mexico border from Baja California.

His younger brother Jake, 30, lived in Australia and had travelled to North America to visit Callum. He was due to start a new job as a doctor when he returned.

Their friend Rhoad, 30, was a San Diego resident and worked in a technology services company. Rhoad was months away from marrying his fiancee when he was killed.

“He was my safety in the world,” his fiancee Natalie Wiertz told the court. “My life is now a nightmare.”

Ari Gisell gave a tearful apology in court, acknowledging that “nothing I can say will compensate you or give you peace”.

“I am focused on being a better person, and I am very sorry for your losses,” said the single mother, as quoted by La Silla Rota.

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FTSE 100 Bounces Back: Pound Strengthens to $1.30, JD Sports Takes Center Stage

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FTSE 100 today: Stocks rebound, pound at $1.30; JD Sports in focus

Undefeated world champion predicts Terence Crawford would be a ‘simple’ opponent

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Terence Crawford has been ruthlessly dismissed as a genuine threat, with an unbeaten world champion firmly believing that a win over the three-division undisputed king would be ‘easy’.

Since dethroning Canelo Alvarez in September, and claiming his four major belts in the process, ‘Bud’ has seemingly been sniffing around for a meaningful challenge.

While not yet confirming his next opponent, the fact that he reportedly rejected an offer to face Jake Paul, who will instead collide with Anthony Joshua on December 19, suggests that Crawford is remaining in the sport for all the right reasons.

He has, of course, already cemented his greatness, with a legacy-defining points victory over Canelo – up at 168lbs, no less – only enhancing his illustrious career.

Before that, Crawford had outpointed Israil Madrimov to claim his WBA world super-welterweight title, which followed his dominant ninth-round finish over Errol Spence Jr at 147lbs.

But now, while expressing little interest in remaining at super-middleweight, it would appear that the 38-year-old has set his sights on one man in the division below.

Just a few weeks ago, Crawford sent a clear message to Janibek Alimkhanuly, the unified world middleweight champion, by saying, “I’ve got my eyes on you, Janibek.”

Alimkhanuly is seemingly up for the contest, as he has already said in an interview with ESNEWS that, in a potential fight with Crawford, he would likely encounter minimal difficulties before having his hand raised.

“Of course – [it would be] easy.”

Before anything else, Alimkhanuly must first take care of business on December 6 when he faces Erislandy Lara, his WBA counterpart, on the undercard of Isaac ‘Pitbull’ Cruz vs Lamont Roach Jr.

But with Lara, 42, having not fought since his ninth-round stoppage victory over an undersized Danny Garcia in September 2024, the IBF and WBO champion will enter their contest as a considerable favourite.

Our Primitive Biology Grapples with the Contemporary World

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As our evolution slows and industrialization and technology accelerates, a growing body of research suggests that human biology is struggling to keep pace. Many of the chronic stress-related health issues we face today aren’t personal failings or modern inconveniences – they’re the predictable result of forcing Stone Age physiology into a world it was never built for.

A fascinating new study from University of Zurich researchers has investigated whether the rapid and extensive environmental shifts of the current Anthropocene have compromised the fitness of Homo sapiens. In less-evolutionary speak: if the world most of us experience daily is having a profound impact on mental and physical health as a species.

Synthesizing data concerning industrialization and urbanization and health, the researchers argue that there are many signs that humans haven’t had time to adapt to the rapid changes in the world over the last century. They cite declining global fertility rates, rising chronic inflammatory conditions and other chronic health trends as signs that we’ve been struggling on Earth since the Industrial Revolution.

One example they give is our rapid change from hunter-gatherer societies, where humans encountered occasional stressors in the wild, to urban environments where daily challenges have us in a sustained high-alert mode. City noise, air and light pollution, microplastics, pesticides, artificial light, processed foods, sedentary lifestyles and sensory overload are all relatively new experiences for H. sapiens.

“In our ancestral environments, we were well adapted to deal with acute stress to evade or confront predators,” explained Colin Shaw, head of the Human Evolutionary EcoPhysiology (HEEP) research group along with Daniel Longman at the University of Zurich. “The lion would come around occasionally, and you had to be ready to defend yourself – or run. The key is that the lion goes away again.”

Now, we get little reprieve from an onslaught of stressors – traffic, work, social media, constant sensory stimulation – that trigger those same ancestral biological responses, except without an “off” switch.

“Our body reacts as though all these stressors were lions,” said Longman. “Whether it’s a difficult discussion with your boss or traffic noise, your stress response system is still the same as if you were facing lion after lion. As a result, you have a very powerful response from your nervous system, but no recovery.”

Many studies have investigated how this constant hum of elevated stress affects interconnected endocrine systems, which has been linked to anxiety disorders, the development of chronic diseases and reduced life expectancy.

“There’s a paradox where, on the one hand, we’ve created tremendous wealth, comfort and health care for a lot of people on the planet,” Shaw added, “but on the other hand, some of these industrial achievements are having detrimental effects on our immune, cognitive, physical and reproductive functions.”

While it’s still debated, the researchers also cite studies into an ongoing global sperm count and motility decline, which has been linked to a range of factors – from obesity to environmental hazards like pesticides and microplastics.

“You could argue that what we’re seeing today is a form of natural selection,” Shaw said. “But letting chronic stress kill people for hundreds of generations until we evolve resistance is clearly not a solution.”

While this is all fairly gloomy, and not all chronic conditions and mental health presentations are due to environmental influences, the researchers believe this work can go a long way in improving lives. And recent studies using advanced genomic analysis suggest we’re actually adapting – if not evolving – much faster than scientists previously thought.

“It shows the plasticity of the human genome,” says Karin Broberg of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, who genetics and environmental toxins. “We’ve spread throughout the world, and we live in very extreme environments, and we’re able to make them our homes. We are like rats or cockroaches – extremely adaptable.”

We do, however, have brains that are far more complex than insects and rodents, which Shaw points out is part of the problem – it’s a fascinating case study for evolutionary biologists, but not so practical or helpful when it comes to our comparatively short time on Earth.

“Biological adaptation is very slow,” he said. “Longer-term genetic adaptations are multigenerational – tens to hundreds of thousands of years.”

So, what can we do to mitigate the toll the world around us takes on our health? The researchers believe we need to change our relationship with nature – to consider it as an important health intervention – and prioritize constructing more sustainable environments. This might be easier said than done, given the world’s population and ever-growing demand on natural resources. Not to mention our species’ insatiable appetite for making money at the expense of the natural environment. Change, says Shaw, requires both cultural and environmental solutions.

“One approach is to fundamentally rethink our relationship with nature – treating it as a key health factor and protecting or regenerating spaces that resemble those from our hunter-gatherer past,” he said. “Our research can identify which stimuli most affect blood pressure, heart rate or immune function, for example, and pass that knowledge on to decision-makers.

“We need to get our cities right – and at the same time regenerate, value and spend more time in natural spaces,” he added.

Scientists urge ‘nature treatment’ to counter day-to-day life in urban environments

“As an evolutionary anthropologist, my earlier work focused on Neanderthals and bone adaptation, which was fascinating in its own right,” Shaw said. “But the challenges we face today feel more urgent. Those with the resources – financial or intellectual – have a responsibility to invest them in solving these problems. To me, it’s a moral imperative to do the right thing.”

At the very least, the researchers note, we should consider getting out into nature as valuable treatment for our health and wellbeing.

The research was published in the journal Biology Reviews.

Source: University of Zurich and MedicalXpress

Trump announces Mamdani’s visit to White House on Friday | Latest Update from Donald Trump

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After months of trading public barbs, the US president and New York City mayor-elect are set to meet in person.

United States President Donald Trump is poised to host New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani for a meeting at the White House, marking an about-face for a duo who have painted themselves as diametrically and ideologically opposed in their political visions for the country.

On his social media platform Truth Social, Trump wrote late on Wednesday that Mamdani will visit the Oval Office on Friday in a post that also falsely called Mamdani a communist and placed his middle name, Kwame, in quotation marks.

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“Further details to follow!” the president added.

Throughout the campaign that culminated in Mamdani’s historic November 4 election victory as the city’s first Muslim mayor, the president zeroed in on Mamdani as a target for public attacks, slamming the democratic socialist as a “communist”, mispronouncing his name and threatening to cut off federal funding to New York if he won.

Trump even endorsed the Democrat Andrew Cuomo over the Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa in the final hours before the vote, telling his followers that Mamdani was a “FAILURE”.

Mamdani, for his part, has regularly linked the Trump administration to authoritarianism and portrayed his own goals as mayor – tackling the affordability crisis and assuaging income inequality – in direct contrast to the president’s lifelong chase of wealth and power.

“If anyone can show a nation betrayed by Donald Trump how to defeat him, it is the same city that gave rise to him,” Mamdani pledged in his election victory speech, referencing Trump’s New York roots. “And if there is any way to terrify a despot, it is by dismantling the very conditions that allowed him to accumulate power.”

Still, since the election earlier this month – which also saw sweeping wins for Democrats in New Jersey and Virginia – Trump has signalled a willingness to defrost relations. In a speech to the American Business Forum in Florida, the president appeared to walk back his funding threat even as he railed against communism.

“We’ll help him, we’ll help him. We want New York to be successful. We’ll help him a little bit, maybe,” he said.

Numerous Republicans and MAGA supporters have launched vitriolic and racist attacks on Mamdani in the build-up to the mayoral election and after Mamdani swept to victory.

Days before the election day, Mamdani gave an emotional speech addressing “racist, baseless attacks” from his opponents. Speaking outside a mosque in the Bronx, Mamdani criticised opponents for bringing “hatred to the forefront”, noting that their Islamophobia not only affected him as the Democratic nominee for mayor but also close to one million Muslims living in New York.

Earlier this week, Mamdani told reporters his team contacted the White House because he had made a “commitment that showed a willingness to meet with anyone and everyone, so long as it is for the benefit” of New Yorkers.

“The president ran a campaign where he spoke about a promise to deliver cheaper groceries, a promise to reduce the cost of living,” Mamdani said. “We are seeing his actions … leading to the exact opposite effect for New Yorkers. I will go to make the case, to the president, and to anyone, frankly, that these are the kinds of things we need to change.”

Green industry leaders praise China’s actions in climate action, stating that the eastern superpower is not just talking the talk, but also walking the walk.

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For the first time, the U.S. did not send a delegation to COP—the UN conference where countries roll out action plans to mitigate climate change. This comes after Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Paris Agreement in January, calling it ‘unfair’ and ‘one-sided’—and removing the world’s largest historical emitter from the fight against climate change. 

But green industry leaders say this doesn’t mean that climate diplomacy is dead.

“When there’s a vacuum, something or someone will fill it. In the climate leadership space, we now see many countries from the Global South stepping up,” said Faroze Nadar, the executive director of the UN Global Compact Network Malaysia and Brunei, at the Fortune Innovation Forum in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Tuesday.

He pointed to the ongoing COP30 in Belém, Brazil, noting that many prominent pavilions were from Asian countries, with China having an especially large presence. 

“Climate diplomacy is now being pushed very much by the Chinese,” Nadar said.

Fellow panelists agreed, adding that while China is stepping up in global climate talks, it is also taking concrete climate actions.

“(China) is not just talking, it’s walking the walk,” said Ying Staton, the Chief Sustainability Officer and Vice President for Asia Pacific at Plastic Energy.

The eastern superpower has been driving the global energy transition, by expanding production and driving down the cost of renewables, Staton added. It produces 90% of the world’s solar panels, 60% of wind turbines, 85% of battery cells, and dominates in rare earth metals.

Yet Trump’s decision to pull back has not fully eroded the influence of the U.S. at climate talks, as a battalion of state and local representatives—including California governor Gavin Newsom—made the trip to Brazil instead.

“(This shows that) there are so many policy levers that you can pull, and often it’s the local municipal governments who have the more direct levers,” Staton said.

And though governments have a role to play, so do businesses.

“The new economy is going to build on the climate movement, so there is business sense in being part (of it),” said Nadar. “And businesses are the easiest stakeholders to work with, because they’re driven by a common language of profitability.”

For instance, the UN Global Compact Network Malaysia and Brunei, which Nadar helms, often works with Sarawak Energy—Malaysia’s largest green energy producer—on corporate sustainability efforts, he said.

Investing in climate action should also be framed as a strategic advantage to companies, rather than a cost. After all, the green premium—or the added cost companies pay for sustainability—is only temporary, Staton said.

“The more you build and the more you scale, the cheaper these solutions become, and that’s how you drive the green premium to zero,” she said. “If you look at renewable energy 20 years ago, there was a green premium—there isn’t one today.”

Aiying Wang, the President & CEO of Greater China, SEA and India at Envac AB, echoed Staton’s sentiments, adding that scale is key. Green technology and infrastructure need scale, so that businesses can “do the right thing” and invest in them without losing profitability, she said.

Trump signs bill mandating release of Jeffrey Epstein documents

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Watch: “I’m all for it”, Trump says on calls to release Epstein files

US President Donald Trump announced on Wednesday that he signed a bill ordering the release of all files related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The bill requires the justice department to release all information from its Epstein investigation “in a searchable and downloadable format” within 30 days.

Trump previously opposed releasing the files, but he changed course last week after facing pushback from Epstein’s victims and members of his own Republican Party.

With his support, the legislation overwhelmingly cleared both chambers of Congress, the House of Representatives and Senate, on Tuesday.

In a post on Truth Social on Wednesday, the president accused Democrats of championing the issue to distract attention from the achievements of his administration.

“Perhaps the truth about these Democrats, and their associations with Jeffrey Epstein, will soon be revealed, because I HAVE JUST SIGNED THE BILL TO RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES!” he wrote.

Although a congressional vote was not required to release the files – Trump could have ordered the release on his own – lawmakers in the House passed the legislation with a 427-1 vote. The Senate gave unanimous consent to pass it upon its arrival, sending the bill to Trump for his signature.

The Epstein files subject to release under the legislation are documents from criminal investigations into the financier, including transcripts of interviews with victims and witnesses, and items seized in raids of his properties. Those materials include internal justice department communications, flight logs, and people and entities connected to Epstein.

The files are different from the more than 20,000 pages of documents from Epstein’s estate released by Congress last week, including some that directly mention Trump.

Those include 2018 messages from Epstein in which he said of Trump: “I am the one able to take him down” and “I know how dirty donald is”.

Trump was a friend of Epstein’s for years, but the president has said they fell out in the early 2000s, two years before Epstein was first arrested. Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein.

Speaking to reporters on Monday night, Trump said Republicans had “nothing to do with Epstein”.

“It’s really a Democrat problem,” he said. “The Democrats were Epstein’s friends, all of them.”

Getty Images A close up image of Trump in the Oval Office. He wears a dark suit and blue tieGetty Images

Epstein was found dead in 2019 in his New York prison cell in what a coroner ruled was a suicide. He was being held on charges of sex trafficking. He had been convicted previously of soliciting prostitution from a minor in 2008.

The once high-flying financier had ties with a number of high-profile figures, including Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, the brother of King Charles and former prince; Trump; Trump’s former advisor Steve Bannon; and a cast of other characters from the world of media, politics and entertainment.

On Wednesday, former Harvard president Larry Summers took a leave from teaching at the university while the school investigated his links to Epstein, revealed in a series of chummy email exchanges.

White House: Epstein story ‘a manufactured hoax’

Attorney General Pam Bondi is required to release “all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials” related to Epstein and his co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell no later than 30 days after the law is enacted. Maxwell currently is serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking.

But based on the law’s text, portions could still be withheld if they are deemed to invade personal privacy or relate to an active investigation.

The bill gives Bondi the power to withhold information that would jeopardise any active federal investigation or identify any victims.

One of the bill’s architects, Republican Congressman Thomas Massie, said he had concerns about some files being withheld.

“I’m concerned that [Trump is] opening a flurry of investigations, and I believe they may be trying to use those investigations as a predicate for not releasing the files. That’s my concern,” he said.

Watch: Moment House passes bill to release Epstein files