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AI Generated Songs Appearing on Dead Artists’ Spotify Pages

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Melody Bot, Jul 22, 2025.

  1. Melody Bot

    Your friendly little forum bot. Staff Member

    This article has been imported from chorus.fm for discussion. All of the forum rules still apply.

    404 Media (paywalled) is reporting on how Spotify is allowing AI-Generated songs on various dead artists’ pages:

    According to his official Spotify page, Blaze Foley, a country music singer-songwriter who was murdered in 1989, released a new song called “Together” last week. The song, which features a male country singer, piano, and an electric guitar, vaguely sounds like a new, slow country song. The Spotify page for the song also features an image of an AI-generated image of a man who looks nothing like Foley singing into a microphone.

    Craig McDonald, the owner of Lost Art Records, the label that distributes all of Foley’s music and manages his Spotify page, told me that any Foley fan would instantly realize “Together” is not one of his songs.

    Consequence has more:

    Update: In a statement a spokesperson for Spotify said, “The content in question violates Spotify’s deceptive content policies, which prohibit impersonation intended to mislead, such as replicating another creator’s name, image, or description, or posing as a person, brand, or organization in a deceptive manner. This is not allowed. We take action against licensors and distributors who fail to police for this kind of fraud and those who commit repeated or egregious violations can and have been permanently removed from Spotify.”

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  2. rbf737

    Regular

    Interesting. The big distributors like Distrokid and Ditto Music take warnings and notes like this from Spotify extremely seriously for obvious reasons (if anyone uploads music to Spotify, Apple Music, etc. and consequently uses a distributor then they know what I'm talking about with all the hoops you have to jump through sometimes with uploads being flagged and requiring edits to conform to the requirements and specifications of Spotify and others).

    It would be nice if this led to even greater scrutiny over AI songs at the distributor level, with Distrokid and the like requiring that you specify how much AI was used to create each song if any and then that could be visibly reflected once they hit the streaming services.
     
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