Spotify Deletes 75 Million Spam Tracks as Company Tightens Rules Around AI Music Amid Growing Debate in Jamaica

1 month ago 4

Amid conversations surrounding AI in music taking center stage in Jamaica, Swedish streaming giant Spotify has shaken the industry by removing more than 75 million “spammy” tracks as part of a sweeping crackdown on artificial intelligencedriven abuse. The company announced that the bulk deletions targeted ultra-short, duplicated, and AI-generated songs uploaded en masse to exploit streaming royalties. The move underscores growing concern over how easily bad actors can manipulate the digital ecosystem, siphoning both attention and earnings from legitimate creators.

Spotify’s new safeguards are threefold: a music spam filter to catch suspicious uploads before they gain traction, stricter rules requiring explicit permission for AI vocal impersonations, and collaboration with DDEX to create metadata standards for labelling AI-assisted content. “It’s about building trust, not punishing responsible creators,” the company stressed, while noting that overall engagement with AI-generated music remains minimal compared to traditional human-made tracks.

The crackdown lands just as Jamaica’s own music community wrestles with the cultural and ethical impact of AI. Selector Foota Hype and singer Denyque have emerged as two of the most vocal voices in the debate, offering sharply contrasting perspectives. Foota likened AI’s arrival to the introduction of Auto-Tune and Melodyne, saying, “It’s called innovation, expansion and evolving.” He even floated the idea of a separate “AI Grammy” to recognise machine-generated artistry without undermining human performers.

Denyque, however, pushed back strongly, framing the issue as a matter of respect and authenticity. “When I think about how much blood, sweat, tears, long nights, long days, literal sickness… that I’ve put into my career and have never been on the receiving end of a label contract, much less a multimillion-dollar one, it’s baffling,” she told the Jamaica Observer. To her, no algorithm can replicate the raw, irreplaceable presence of a true performer on stage.

Together, Spotify’s crackdown and Jamaica’s industry debate reflect the same tension: innovation versus integrity. AI promises efficiency, scalability, and even billions in new industry revenue by 2030, but its unchecked misuse risks sidelining human artistry. Whether through corporate policies or cultural pushback, the next chapter in music will likely be defined by how well the industry balances progress with protection.

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