ElevenLabs just dropped a Music Marketplace. Create, publish, and earn from AI tracks without the copyright strikes. Is it a dev's dream or just noise?

Ever tried throwing a sick background track into your midnight product demo, only to get instantly nuked by a YouTube copyright strike? Yeah, we've all been there. Navigating music sync licensing is usually more depressing than debugging a massive memory leak.
But it looks like the nightmare might be over. ElevenCreative (the squad behind ElevenLabs) just dropped their Music Marketplace. No endless emails, no legal teams required. You just prompt a track, use it, and maybe even get paid.
For those who hate reading docs, here's the core mechanic: Open the platform -> Prompt a track -> Refine it in the browser -> Publish it -> Earn real cash every time someone downloads or remixes your masterpiece.
Why is this a big deal?
Browsing through the launch comments, the community is heavily divided:
The Pragmatists (Us): Most agree this is a "huge unlock." Sync licensing was built for big studios, not a solo dev pushing code at 11 PM. Getting royalty-free music without the licensing maze is a massive win.
The Skeptics: Some sharp folks are asking the real questions: "Who truly owns a viral AI-generated track in this system?" Others are asking for receipts: "Are creators actually earning yet, or is this just theory?"
The Doomers: Many foresee a dark timeline for real musicians. If this ai generator is significantly cheaper and faster, what stops the marketplace from becoming a "slop house"—flooded with thousands of generic, similar-sounding tracks?
To be fair, the final boss hasn't been defeated yet. Major labels like Universal, Sony, and Warner haven't signed on. So if you need a track that sounds exactly like The Weeknd doing a country song, you're out of luck.
But let's be real—as a dev, you don't need a Grammy-winning track. You need a legally safe, decent-sounding beat for your indie game, SaaS promo, or client project. This tool gives you exactly that, bypassing the legal headache entirely.
Tech moves fast and breaks things. Instead of arguing whether AI is ruining art, just grab the API, build your stuff, and secure the bag.
Source: Product Hunt