Updated
Updated · gadgetreview.com · Jul 17
Spotify Removes 75 Million AI Tracks, Tightens Anti-Fraud Rules
Updated
Updated · gadgetreview.com · Jul 17

Spotify Removes 75 Million AI Tracks, Tightens Anti-Fraud Rules

3 articles · Updated · gadgetreview.com · Jul 17

Summary

  • More than 75 million AI-generated tracks were removed from Spotify over the past 12 months after the company classified them as spam designed to siphon streaming royalties.
  • Spotify said the crackdown targets fraud rather than AI music itself, focusing on mass uploads, fake metadata, duplicate content, artificial streaming and unauthorized voice cloning.
  • Updated rules add machine-learning spam filters, DDEX-based AI metadata tags, anti-scraping defenses and a dedicated monitoring team, while allowing AI-assisted music if creators hold commercial rights and show genuine creative intent.
  • The move follows Spotify’s 2023 removal of tens of thousands of AI songs tied to Boomy and comes as labels, IFPI and RIAA push broader AI labeling standards across the music industry.

Insights

With AI music unable to hold copyright, who truly profits from the next wave of algorithm-driven hits?
If 44% of new music is AI-generated, are we witnessing the birth of a new art form or its dilution?

Spotify’s 75 Million Track Purge: How the Platform Is Battling AI Music Fraud and Protecting Artists

Overview

Over the past year, Spotify has intensified its crackdown on fraudulent and spammy content, removing over 75 million tracks from its platform. This action is part of Spotify’s commitment to safeguard its platform and support legitimate artists, as the rapid advancement and popularity of AI tools have led to a surge in AI-generated content, including deepfakes. The proliferation of such online content makes it increasingly difficult for tech companies to police their platforms effectively. To address these challenges, Spotify aims to protect artists and producers from spam, impersonation, and deception, while also providing listeners with greater transparency about the music they encounter.

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