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Spotify adds verified artist badges so that you know you’re listening to a human, and not AI

Spotify just made it easier to separate real artists from AI-generated music farms.

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Spotify verified artist badge
Spotify

In the age of AI, it is getting harder to know if the music you listen to is made by a real human or generated by an algorithm. Previous reports suggested that Spotify had no plans to label AI-generated music

However, it seems that the company has changed its direction on this debate. The platform is rolling out a new Verified by Spotify badge, along with additional artist activity details, to give you more context about the artists you are listening to and discovering.

What does the verified badge mean?

The new badge is a light green checkmark with “Verified by Spotify” text. It will start appearing on artist profiles and next to artist names in search over the coming weeks.

To earn the badge, an artist needs to have consistent listener activity over time, comply with Spotify’s platform policies, and have a real, identifiable presence, such as concert dates, merch, and linked social accounts. At launch, AI-generated artists and AI personas flooding the streaming service are not eligible for verification.

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Spotify says that at launch, more than 99% of artists that listeners are actively searching for will be verified. 

What else is changing?

Alongside the badge, Spotify is also adding a new section to all artist profiles, whether verified or not. It will highlight career milestones, release activity, and touring history, giving you a better picture of who the artist is beyond just their songs.

Spotify admits this is not a perfect system from day one. It will continue to refine the verification process over time. But it is a meaningful step toward helping you connect with the human artistry behind the music you love.

Recently, Apple Music also launched a “Transparency Tags” feature that makes it easier for the system to flag AI-generated music. That said, I prefer what Spotify is doing here, as it’s much easier to verify human artists than flag AI music.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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