This FAQ is intended to help paid Tunee users clearly understand how copyright ownership, copyright certificates, and third-party platform reviews work — so you can use, distribute, and monetize your music with confidence.
① Who owns the copyright to music generated under a paid plan?
For music generated during an active paid subscription, the copyright belongs to you, the user.
You hold full commercial rights, including:
- Public distribution
- Monetization
- Commercial use
- Licensing and partnerships
Tunee does not claim ownership over your music and does not charge additional royalties for commercial usage.
② What role does copyright play on Tunee?
On Tunee, copyright serves one primary purpose:
to clearly establish legal ownership and commercial usage rights.
When a track is generated under a paid plan:
- The music is legally yours
- You are authorized to use it commercially
- Tunee acts only as the generation tool, not the rights holder
This copyright foundation is what allows you to distribute responsibly and respond properly if questions or disputes arise.
③ What is the Tunee copyright certificate used for?
The Tunee copyright certificate is an official proof document, confirming that:
The track was generated using Tunee
It was created during a paid subscription period
The copyright belongs to the user
The certificate is designed for:
- Ownership verification
- Supporting copyright claims or appeals
- Business cooperation, contracts, or registrations
Important:
The copyright certificate proves legal rights, not platform approval outcomes.
④ Why can a track with a copyright certificate still be flagged or rejected by platforms?
This is one of the most common misunderstandings.
Platform review ≠ legal judgment 
Most platforms (e.g. Meta, Spotify, SoundCloud, Peloton) rely on automated content recognition systems such as Audible Magic or Content ID. These systems:
- Detect similarity patterns
- Screen for potential risk
- Apply platform-specific compliance rules
They do not determine:
- Legal copyright ownership
- Copyright validity
- Infringement rulings
A platform flag is an internal risk or policy decision, not a statement that your copyright is invalid.
⑤ Does owning copyright guarantee successful distribution everywhere? 
No platform offers such a guarantee.
Tunee is a music generation tool, not a distributor or content-review authority.
Final approval depends on:
- Each platform’s content policies
- Automated detection results
- Manual review standards (if any)
Owning copyright reduces risk — it does not eliminate platform discretion.
⑥ Why is having copyright still important if platforms can reject tracks? 
Because copyright protects you, not platform algorithms.
With copyright (and a certificate), you can:
Prove legal ownership
Respond to disputes or claims
Provide documentation when requested
Safeguard long-term commercial value
Without copyright, risks increase significantly:
Monetization removal
Takedowns without recourse
Inability to appeal effectively
Copyright is risk protection, not a publishing shortcut.
⑦ Does attribution like “Powered by Tunee” replace copyright or licensing? 
No.
While attribution is appreciated:
- It does not grant commercial rights
- It does not replace a copyright license
- It does not override subscription requirements
Commercial rights depend only on whether the track was generated under a paid plan (or licensed afterward).
⑧ Can I request compensation if my track fails platform review? 
If an issue is caused by:
- System errors
- Clear generation failures
- Abnormal behavior inconsistent with normal output
You may contact support for review and possible compensation.
However, if a track is successfully generated and later rejected due to platform-specific policies, this is generally not considered a service failure.
Official Summary
(Key Takeaway for Paid Users)
Music generated during a paid Tunee subscription belongs fully to the user and includes commercial rights.
The copyright certificate proves ownership and origin within the Tunee ecosystem.
Platform approval is independent and subject to each platform’s own rules.
Copyright is about legal protection and risk management, not guaranteed distribution.