Suno launches Spark incubator with restrictive artist terms
The Verge reported that Suno launched Spark for independent artists, but the program's terms give Suno broad rights and include non-disparagement language.
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The Verge reported that Suno launched Spark, an incubator program for independent artists that offers grants, mentorship, and marketing support. The catch is in the terms: artists must make songs available for remixing, grant Suno broad rights to use and create derivative works, waive trial and class-action rights, and agree to positive-promotion/non-disparagement language. That makes Spark more than a creator-support program; it is part of the ongoing fight over whether AI music platforms can win artists over while keeping broad control over the underlying rights.
Key details: Published June 28, 2026 by The Verge, Suno launched the Spark incubator for unsigned artists, Participants grant Suno broad rights and agree to restrictive terms, The program arrives while Suno faces artist criticism and litigation pressure.
Why it matters: Creator programs are becoming part of the AI music industry's legal and reputational strategy, and the terms matter as much as the grants.