
"One of the most popular music streaming platforms is taking steps to help protect both artists and users against the misuse of AI. In , Spotify said it was making several policy changes related to AI-generated content on its platform. These changes are designed not only to help people know when songs are made by AI (or when AI was used in the process at all) but also to fight against the misuse of AI in music."
"Spotify notes the fight against spam isn't necessarily new, adding that it's been fighting junk tracks for over a decade. AI though, has escalated things significantly. In the past year alone, Spotify says, it says it has removed more than 75 million "spammy" tracks from its service. What's changing on the streaming platform Here's a look at the changes you'll see in Spotify:"
Spotify will require clear labeling when music is generated by AI or when AI is used in the creation process. Spotify will remove music that impersonates another artist's voice without that artist's permission, including uploads that omit artist metadata but contain vocals clearly recognizable as another artist. Spotify will strengthen spam filtering to combat mass uploads, duplicates, SEO manipulation, artificially short tracks, and other tactics aimed at exploiting play-based payouts. Spotify reports removing more than 75 million spammy tracks in the past year and positions the changes to protect artists and platform integrity.
Read at ZDNET
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