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Deezer battles AI music fraud as streaming scams reach 20K daily tracks
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Music streaming service Deezer will begin flagging AI-generated songs on its platform as part of an escalating battle against streaming fraud. The Paris-based company reports that 18% of daily uploads—roughly 20,000 tracks—are now completely AI-generated, nearly doubling from 10% just three months earlier, with fraudsters using these songs to manipulate streams and collect royalties illegally.

The big picture: AI-generated music is becoming a vehicle for large-scale streaming fraud, with Deezer estimating that seven in 10 listens of AI songs come from bots rather than humans.

  • Fraudsters “create tons of songs” and use automated systems to inflate play counts, earning substantial royalty payments through what CEO Alexis Lanternier calls “stream manipulation.”
  • One U.S. criminal case last year involved a man who generated hundreds of thousands of AI songs and used bots to stream them billions of times, earning at least $10 million.

How it works: Deezer uses AI detection tools to identify patterns in artificially generated music, then displays warning labels to users.

  • The platform analyzes songs using the same AI generators that create them, identifying “subtle but recognizable patterns” that change constantly.
  • “We’re fighting AI with AI,” Lanternier explained, noting the detection system requires daily updates as AI music generators evolve.
  • Songs flagged for stream manipulation will be cut off from royalty payments entirely.

Industry-wide implications: While AI-generated tracks represent only 0.5% of total streams on Deezer, the trend reflects broader tensions around AI’s role in creative industries.

  • Major AI song generators Suno and Udio face multiple copyright infringement lawsuits from record companies, accused of training on copyrighted works from artists like Chuck Berry and Mariah Carey.
  • Gema, a German royalty-collection group, is suing Suno for generating songs “confusingly similar” to originals, including tracks by Alphaville and Boney M.

What they’re saying: Deezer frames the initiative as protecting legitimate artists in an era of AI disruption.

  • “It’s committed to safeguarding the rights of artists and songwriters at a time where copyright law is being put into question in favor of training AI models,” Lanternier said.
  • He distinguishes between legitimate AI-assisted music creation with human artists involved versus fully automated content generation for fraudulent purposes.

Why this matters: The surge in AI-generated music fraud highlights the challenge streaming platforms face as generative AI tools become more accessible and sophisticated, potentially undermining the economics that support human musicians and songwriters.

Music streaming service Deezer adds AI song tags in fight against fraud

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