Korea Music Copyright Association disputes audit criticism over AI works registration

By Choi Songhee Posted : March 25, 2026, 17:45 Updated : March 25, 2026, 17:45
Korea Music Copyright Association (KOMCA). [Photo provided by KOMCA]
The Korea Music Copyright Association, known as KOMCA, on Tuesday rejected a recent audit finding and related reports on artificial intelligence, calling them an interpretation that overlooks the specific nature of music copyright and the group’s response efforts.

The Board of Audit and Inspection said in a March 24 announcement that 11 copyright collective management organizations, including KOMCA, were registering works and collecting and distributing royalties without separately verifying whether AI had been used.

KOMCA responded in a statement Tuesday that it has reviewed internal policy while operating an AI task force team since 2023 and has officially implemented a “registration hold policy” for AI-used works since March. Under the policy, members seeking to register songs must check whether AI was used, and any work reported as AI-assisted is put on hold, the association said.

KOMCA said the measure is a temporary management step meant to prevent confusion in the creative ecosystem and distortions of rights in the absence of legal standards. It said it is not denying copyright for AI-used works across the board, but taking a preemptive step to reduce disputes.

The association also said there is no widely trusted technology worldwide that can perfectly determine whether AI was used. Given those technical limits, it said, the system inevitably relies on creators’ self-reporting, and a small number of false filings should not be treated as overall negligence by the association.

As alternatives, KOMCA said its new chairman, Lee Si-ha, had proposed verification steps even before taking office, including requiring submission of DAW (digital audio workstation) files that can help show the actual creation process. It added that the association is accelerating development of a “Korean-style AI detection program.”

KOMCA said it is also strengthening after-the-fact monitoring, including screening suspected AI-use cases found on platforms such as YouTube Shorts and withholding royalty payments while conducting additional analysis.

The association said it is discussing national-level standards through the “K-Music Rights Organizations Coexistence Committee,” launched in February under Lee’s leadership. Topics include requiring transparency in AI generation processes and establishing clear criteria to distinguish human-created works from AI-generated works.

“Even though management systems have not been established globally, the association has responded proactively,” a KOMCA official said. The official added that KOMCA will work closely with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to help establish a fair copyright order.




* This article has been translated by AI.

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