It sounds like a joke, or a bad episode of Black Mirror.
A band of four guys with shaggy hair released two albums’ worth of generic psych-rock songs back-to-back. The songs ended up on Spotify users’ Discover Weekly feeds, as well as on third-party playlists boasting hundreds of thousands of followers. Within a few weeks, the band’s music had garnered millions of streams — except the band wasn’t real. It was a “synthetic music project” created using artificial intelligence.
The big problem is the people doing this are also gaming the algorithm to get on those “discover” feeds. You think someone that uses bots to fake a band wouldn’t use bots to inflate play count and make it look like they’re popular?
If companies don’t take a stand, they’re gonna end up just burning bandwidth so bots can listen to bots and real humans move on to a platform not filled with slop.
mrdown@lemmy.world 5 days ago
Human made music is here to stay too
BurgerBaron@piefed.social 5 days ago
Bandcamp is my still primary new music source, and I've uninstalled my modded Spotify apps over AI. I'm just not gonna deal with it.
mrdown@lemmy.world 5 days ago
I buy what i can afford on bandcamp and pirate the rest. All my music are stored locally and i play them on musicolet
BrikoX@lemmy.zip 5 days ago
Definitely.