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AI Floods Spotify: Artists Fight Fake Music
11 Apr
Summary
- Generative AI has significantly amplified music stream fraud.
- Spotify removed over 75 million spam tracks in 12 months.
- Industry experts estimate 5-10% of streams are fraudulent.

Generative AI has dramatically escalated music stream fraud, a problem that has plagued the industry for years. Jazz composer Jason Moran recently encountered an AI-generated EP using his name on Spotify, prompting an investigation into this growing concern. This issue extends beyond Moran, affecting numerous musicians, including prominent jazz artists and even rappers like Drake.
Spotify has taken steps to address the deluge of "spammy tracks," removing over 75 million in the past year. The platform is developing new tools to give artists more control over releases appearing under their names and enhance identity protection. Despite these measures, artists like Moran find them insufficient, especially for deceased musicians whose estates cannot verify AI-generated content.
Industry experts estimate that fraudulent streams constitute 5% to 10% of all streams, amounting to $1 billion to $2 billion annually. This illicit activity diverts revenue from legitimate artists. One individual defrauded platforms of over $10 million through AI-generated songs and bot-driven streams. The ease with which AI can rapidly produce vast amounts of content makes it an "accelerant" for such fraudulent schemes.
While platforms like Spotify are working on safeguards, the responsibility often falls on artists to police their own profiles. The process of getting fraudulent content removed can be time-consuming, involving initial interactions with chatbots before reaching human support. Even after removal, fake content can re-emerge on different platforms, underscoring the persistent nature of AI-driven music fraud.