
Markus Deisenberger
4 articles
Markus Deisenberger, born in Salzburg in 1971, is a lawyer and freelance journalist who lives and works in Salzburg and Vienna. He is editor-in-chief of a Salzburg city magazine and publishes regularly in German and Austrian magazines. He also writes novels, most recently "Winter in Vienna".

Emotion and disruption: artificial intelligence in music production
To what extent is artificial intelligence changing the way music is produced? Markus Deisenberger talked to five renowned music producers (Wolfgang Schrammel, Thomas Foster, David Piribauer, Zebo Adam and Georg Tomandl) about the upheaval in the markets, the associated losses and opportunities.


Artificial intelligence in music: feared, trivialized, demonized (part 3)
In part 3 of the Music and AI series, Markus Deisenberger deals with the copyright issue of "man vs. machine" and poses the essential question in the context of participatory democracy: "How do we want to shape AI? And what does the development of AI have to do with the invention of the railroad?


Artificial intelligence in music: feared, trivialized, demonized (part 2)
In part 2 of the series on AI in music, Markus Deisenberger explores the question of why AI threatens to dissolve copyright law like a pinch of salt in the digital sea of data, analyzes opportunities and possibilities for the education sector and raises urgent questions about transparency, fairness and diversity in the development and use of AI.


Artificial intelligence in music: feared, trivialized, demonized (part 1)
Artificial intelligence is changing the professional world, including that of musicians. But what do music creators have to fear from AI? Will AI use their work without having to pay for them? Will AI even replace them, or devalue their art? And what happens to works created using AI? Do they enjoy copyright protection?


