City
Epaper

Spotify cleans up its playlists, removes thousands of AI-made songs

By IANS | Updated: May 9, 2023 17:00 IST

San Francisco, May 9 Music streaming platform Spotify has removed tens of thousands of songs from artificial intelligence ...

Open in App

San Francisco, May 9 Music streaming platform Spotify has removed tens of thousands of songs from artificial intelligence (AI) music startup Boomy amid complaints of fraud and clutter across streaming services.

According to the Financial Times, citing sources, the company recently took down about 7 per cent of the tracks, equivalent to "tens of thousands" of songs uploaded by Boomy.

In addition, recording giant Universal Music had flagged to all the main streaming platforms that it saw suspicious streaming activity on Boomy tracks.

The report said that the music industry has been grappling with the emergence of AI-generated songs and the deluge of new tracks flooding streaming platforms in recent months.

Spotify also confirmed it had removed some Boomy content, saying, "Artificial streaming is a longstanding, industry-wide issue that Spotify is working to stamp out across our service."

"We are always encouraged when we see our partners exercise vigilance around the monitoring or activity on their platforms," Michael Nash, Universal's chief digital officer, was quoted as saying.

Further, the report stated that the Boomy songs were removed due to suspected "artificial streaming" online bots impersonating human listeners in order to inflate audience numbers for specific songs.

Launched two years ago, Boomy lets users select from a variety of styles or descriptors, such as "rap beats" or "rainy nights," to generate a machine-generated track.

Users can then distribute the music to streaming services, where they will earn royalties.

Boomy, based in the US, claims that its users have created over 14 million songs, the report mentioned.

Meanwhile, Spotify has said that it has crossed 515 million monthly active users (MAUs) in Q1 2023, a 22 per cent (year-on-year) increase from 489 MAUs in the last quarter its strongest first quarter since going public in 2018.

Premium subscribers grew 15 per cent (year-on-year) to 210 million with better performance across all regions, led by Europe and Latin America.


shs/vd

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: San FranciscoFinancial TimesUniversal MusicMichael nashusUs Secretary Of StateUs National Public RadioUs State DepartmentUs ArmyUs Department Of CommerceUs Food And Drug AdministrationUs DefenceUs Justice DepartmentUs District Court
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalNorth Carolina Plane Crash: Retired NASCAR Driver Greg Biffle and Family Among Seven Killed in Statesville Jet Crash

International'Warrior Dividend': Donald Trump Announces $1,776 Christmas Bonus to Active US Soldiers

BusinessUS Stock Exchange Nasdaq Moves Toward 24-Hour Trading, How Will Impact on Indian Share Market

BusinessIndia’s November 2025 Exports Hit Three-Year High Despite US Tariffs

InternationalUS: Two Elderly People Found Dead at Film Director Rob Reiner’s Los Angeles Residence

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologySamsung unveils details of new Exynos chipset for Galaxy S26

TechnologyPMVBRY aims to incentivise creation of over 3.5 crore jobs over 2 years

TechnologyIndia’s steel sector mirrors country’s broader economic transformation: Minister

TechnologyS. Korea to mandate facial recognition for opening new mobile numbers

TechnologyIndian team’s satellite internet concept wins NASA’s 2025 Space Apps Challenge