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How will Spotify verify artists?
Spotify said it will verify artist profiles based on the following criteria:
When is the rollout? Spotify said it will roll out verification on an ongoing basis, reviewing millions of artist profiles to ensure accuracy and consistency. It said more than 99% of artists that users actively search for will be verified at launch, with a focus on those with active fan interest or cultural contributions.
Artist details in profile: Spotify said it will introduce a new beta section across all artist profiles that highlights career milestones, release activity, and touring activity. These details, based on its platform data, will appear in the “About” section on mobile and offer a snapshot of an artist’s activity. The feature will apply to all artists regardless of verification status and aims to provide users with additional context to assess authentic artistic activity beyond their music.
AI music on streaming platforms: Deezer said roughly 50,000 fully AI-generated tracks are uploaded daily, accounting for nearly 34% of the total daily deliveries in September 2025. It added that such tracks make up around 0.5% of streams but are often linked to fraudulent activity, including artificial stream inflation.
Spotify, meanwhile, has not disclosed the scale of AI-generated music on its platform but said it removed over 75 million “spammy” tracks in the 12 months leading up to September 2025. Apple Music also asked music labels to add transparency tags for AI use in March 2026.
Why this matters: The rise of AI-generated media has made it increasingly difficult for platforms and users to distinguish authentic artistic output from synthetic or manipulated content at scale. Deezer’s data shows tens of thousands of AI-generated tracks are uploaded to these platforms daily, while Spotify has removed millions of “spammy” uploads, underscoring the scale of the issue. In an October 2025 article, Anthropic’s India Head of Policy, Amlan Mohanty, argued that verifying human-created content will become critical because such work could become scarce and command a premium, require authentication in legal contexts such as copyright disputes or evidentiary use, and enable creators to signal provenance to audiences, platforms, and rights holders.
Spotify’s verification badge reflects an early attempt to operationalise these incentives within music distribution. However, questions still remain about how this will work. Will the system be accurate? Will it distinguish human artists who are uploading AI tracks on their profiles? What will happen to small and independent human artists who are not verified?
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