Tech
May 29, 2026
Spotify CEO Defends AI Music Move, Cites Better Alternative to Piracy
Spotify's CEO defends the company's move into AI-generated music, citing a better alternative to pi…
Spotify's AI Music Strategy
Spotify's chief executive has defended the company's move into AI-generated music, claiming it offers users and creators a better alternative to piracy and unregulated AI slop.
The New Feature
Last week, the platform announced a new feature in which premium users will be allowed to create their own, AI-generated remixes and song covers using music from participating artists. The feature comes as a part of a deal with Universal Music Group that sent Spotify's shares up 16% last week.
The Data Analysis
Spotify's feature will cost extra money, and allow 'one song to become 10,000', said Norström. There appears to be clear demand for AI-generated music, with three AI-generated songs topping music charts last year, including Spotify's.
The Impact Analysis
Ed Newton-Rex, a composer and campaigner for protecting artists' copyright, said: 'I think if you are going to have AI music, it's clearly better that you have AI music that is rooted in consent.' However, he also warned that the feature could lead to human artists facing greater competition from AI-generated work.
The Prediction
Newton-Rex said Norström's decision to frame Spotify's move as a choice to prioritise curated AI content over AI slop elided the more real, pressing competition between human artists and AI-written music. 'The framing is absolutely AI music versus human music. Whenever someone listens to AI music on Spotify, they are not listening to a song that is simply made by a human. There are only so many hours that you listen to music in a day.'
#Spotify
#AI Music
#Universal Music Group
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