Deezer’s AI Music Flood Hits 44% of Daily Uploads as Fraud Concerns Grow

Deezer’s AI Music Flood Hits 44% of Daily Uploads as Fraud Concerns Grow

April 21, 2026

Paris, April 21, 2026, 15:33 CEST

Deezer reports it now sees close to 75,000 entirely AI-generated tracks uploaded daily—roughly 44% of its new music intake each day. That surge puts machine-made songs on the verge of surpassing human-created uploads on the platform.

The update’s impact comes down to scale: streaming royalties get pooled, so even tracks with barely any listeners can siphon off cash and attention if uploaded en masse. That’s especially true when bots or manipulation generate fake plays.

Deezer reports that AI-generated tracks make up just 1% to 3% of all streams on its platform. But of those, 85% ended up flagged as fraudulent and were stripped of royalties—they didn’t count toward payouts.

Paris-based Deezer has pushed back against AI-generated music showing up in users’ feeds. If a song gets tagged as AI-made, it’s yanked from both editorial playlists and algorithmic recommendations. The company isn’t storing high-res versions of those AI tracks anymore, either, according to Deezer.

“AI-generated music is now far from a marginal phenomenon,” Deezer Chief Executive Alexis Lanternier said. He also called on the broader industry to step up, backing artists’ rights and pushing for greater transparency for listeners. Deezer Newsroom

Things escalated fast. Deezer reported daily AI-generated uploads jumped from around 10,000 in January 2025—when it rolled out its AI-music detection tool—to 75,000 just over a year later. In 2025 alone, it flagged and tagged upwards of 13.4 million AI tracks on the platform.

Deezer is counting only tracks that are entirely AI-generated—songs where artificial intelligence handled everything, not just those that used software for production tweaks or mixing. Drawing the line is getting trickier, though, as AI slips from quirky apps into routine studio work.

Spotify has toughened its approach, removing over 75 million spam tracks in the last year. The streaming giant rolled out stricter measures targeting unauthorized vocal impersonations and now supports industry-standard AI disclosures in song credits.

Qobuz, the French streaming and download platform, rolled out a proprietary detection tool in February to flag fully AI-generated tracks both among new releases and in its existing catalog. Deputy CEO Georges Fornay described the influx as “hyperinflation of AI-generated content.” Qobuz Community

Detection isn’t standing still. Deezer claims its system can spot tracks created using major models like Suno and Udio. Still, with models constantly evolving, hidden AI inputs, and edge cases slipping through, platforms may find themselves scrambling to keep up with a fresh batch of uploads.

Right now, it’s the economics taking the strain. Deezer’s data shows that AI-generated tracks haven’t taken over listening habits yet. Still, they’re flooding the supply side, clogging up catalogs, distorting charts, and pushing streaming providers to ramp up spending on fraud prevention.

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