Home / Arts and Entertainment / AI Fuels Music Streaming Fraud Crisis
AI Fuels Music Streaming Fraud Crisis
18 Mar
Summary
- Streaming manipulation artificially boosts play counts for royalty payments.
- Industry estimates up to 10% of streaming content is fraudulent.
- Deezer claims 34% of submitted songs are AI-generated.

The music industry is grappling with a significant increase in streaming fraud, a practice known as streaming manipulation. This involves creating "fake" artists and artificially inflating song play counts on platforms like Spotify and Apple Music to illicitly gain royalty payments. The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) reports that artificial intelligence has "supercharged" this fraudulent activity, ultimately diverting funds from legitimate artists.
Industry insiders unofficially estimate that fraudulent content could account for as much as 10% of all material across streaming services. Calls are mounting for streaming platforms to implement detection tools that can identify AI-generated or manipulated music upon upload. French company Deezer has already deployed such software, reporting that 34% of songs submitted to its service are now categorized as AI-generated, highlighting the growing challenge of distinguishing human creativity from unauthorized artificial content.




