Tunee Paid Users — Copyright, Commercial Use & Platform Review

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.

:white_check_mark: 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:
:backhand_index_pointing_right: 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:

:page_facing_up: The track was generated using Tunee
:page_facing_up: It was created during a paid subscription period
:page_facing_up: The copyright belongs to the user

:white_check_mark: The certificate is designed for:

  • Ownership verification
  • Supporting copyright claims or appeals
  • Business cooperation, contracts, or registrations

:warning: 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 :balance_scale:

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

:police_car_light: 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? :cross_mark:

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)

:warning: Owning copyright reduces risk — it does not eliminate platform discretion.


⑥ Why is having copyright still important if platforms can reject tracks? :star:

Because copyright protects you, not platform algorithms.

With copyright (and a certificate), you can:

:shield: Prove legal ownership
:shield: Respond to disputes or claims
:shield: Provide documentation when requested
:shield: Safeguard long-term commercial value

Without copyright, risks increase significantly:
:prohibited: Monetization removal
:prohibited: Takedowns without recourse
:prohibited: Inability to appeal effectively

:backhand_index_pointing_right: Copyright is risk protection, not a publishing shortcut.


⑦ Does attribution like “Powered by Tunee” replace copyright or licensing? :information_source:

No.

While attribution is appreciated:

  • It does not grant commercial rights
  • It does not replace a copyright license
  • It does not override subscription requirements

:backhand_index_pointing_right: 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? :speech_balloon:

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 :star: (Key Takeaway for Paid Users)

:white_check_mark: Music generated during a paid Tunee subscription belongs fully to the user and includes commercial rights.

:receipt: The copyright certificate proves ownership and origin within the Tunee ecosystem.

:warning: Platform approval is independent and subject to each platform’s own rules.

:shield: Copyright is about legal protection and risk management, not guaranteed distribution.