Why Spotify Has No Button to Filter Out AI Music: A Streaming Platform’s Dilemma

As AI music generation technology advances rapidly, Spotify users are growing increasingly concerned about the proliferation of AI-generated content on the platform. Yet the world’s largest music streaming service has so far refused to give users the option to filter out AI music — a stance that has sparked widespread controversy in its community.

Grassroots User Resistance

In mid-2025, Cedrik Sixtus, a software developer based in Leipzig, Germany, noticed his Spotify playlists were increasingly sprinkled with tracks he suspected were AI-generated. In response, he built a tool to automatically label and block such content.

After uploading his Spotify AI Blocker to code-sharing platforms, hundreds downloaded it. The tool filters out a growing list of more than 4,700 suspected AI artists, drawing on community tracking efforts and indicators like unusually high release volumes and AI-style cover art.

“It is about choice — if you want to hear AI music or if you don’t,” says Sixtus, who would prefer Spotify itself label and enable filtering of AI-generated content.

Spotify’s Position

Spotify has taken a delicate balancing approach. In April, it launched a test feature showing, in a song’s credits, how an artist used AI. But it’s a voluntary system based on what artists tell their record labels or distributors.

“We know this isn’t a complete solution on its own. Building a truly comprehensive system is a challenge that requires industry-wide alignment,” Spotify said in April.

A Spotify spokesperson stated: “Our priority is addressing harmful uses [of AI] like spam and impersonation, rather than trying to filter music based on how it was made.”

Expert Perspective

Robert Prey, who studies streaming platforms at Oxford University’s Internet Institute, describes Spotify’s position as “a difficult — borderline existential — balancing act.”

The platform is trying to avoid making value judgments about how music is created, but risks eroding trust among listeners, artists, and the wider industry if it fails to offer enough transparency.

Competitors Taking Action

Unlike Spotify, smaller competitor Deezer has taken a stronger approach. Last year, it began tagging albums that contain AI-generated tracks produced by Suno, Udio, and similar platforms, and excluding those tracks from algorithmic recommendations and human-curated playlists.

Technical Challenges

Detecting AI music presents enormous technical hurdles. In a controlled test conducted by Deezer and Ipsos, 97% of listeners failed to correctly distinguish between AI-generated and human-made tracks. This suggests that even if platforms wanted to actively detect AI content, the technology makes it extremely difficult.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of AI tracks appear to be uploaded to streaming platforms daily. Even if most currently attract few listens, they could potentially dilute revenue pools for human artists.

Industry Outlook

As generative AI music services like Suno and Udio can now produce increasingly polished, fully realized songs — complete with lyrics, vocals, and instrumentation — from simple text prompts in seconds, the music industry is facing unprecedented transformation. Major platforms including Spotify, YouTube Music, and Amazon Music have yet to adopt clear AI-generated content labels or filters, though this may change as industry standards develop.

Source: BBC News