Spotify adds 'Verified' badges to distinguish human artists from AI

Laura CressTechnology reporter
News imageSpotify A mock up of the artist Ravyn Lenae's profile on Spotify with a green verified checkmark icon on her profile next to a picture of her staring at the camera with long curly hair. Underneath her picture it says "32.8m monthly listeners".Spotify

Spotify is introducing a 'Verified' badge to help users identify when artists on its platform are human, not AI-generated.

The world's most-used music streaming service said the 'Verified by Spotify' text and green checkmark icon would appear next to artist names when they meet "defined standards demonstrating authenticity".

This could include having linked social accounts on their artist profile, consistent listener activity or other "signals of a real artist behind the profile," the company said, such as merchandise or concert dates.

In its blog post, Spotify said "more than 99%" of the artists listeners actively search for will be verified, representing "hundreds of thousands of artists".

It said the process would prioritise acts with "important contributions to music culture and history", rather than "content farms," with the platform rolling out verification and badges over the coming weeks.

With Spotify targeting AI-generated music and personas, some on social media have pointed out a verified account would only prove an artist was human, not that the music was made without utilising AI.

Ed Newton-Rex, a campaigner for creators' rights and former AI executive, said Spotify's approach could "punish real human artists who don't have some of the markers the verification is based on," like touring or selling merchandise.

Instead, he suggests Spotify could be "automatically labelling any AI-generated music" as some other streaming services do.

Professor of Music at the University of Durham Nick Collins said Spotify's decision was "unsurprising" given the "ongoing furore around generative AI" but added it would be a trickier task if it ever tried to label the music itself.

"AI usage is not a binary position between 'entirely authentically handmade' and 'fully AI generated' but can have lots of in-between cases," he said.

"We can probably welcome some sort of tagging system like this, though it may favour the more commercial and successful artists already active rather than new independent artists."

Spotify's AI problem

Spotify has come under fire in recent years for its approach to AI-generated content on its site.

In 2023, the then chief executive of Spotify Daniel Ek told the BBC he had no plans to completely ban content created by artificial intelligence from the platform.

Meanwhile in 2025, a band called The Velvet Sundown, which had a verified page on the network with 850,000 monthly listeners, prompted accusations they and their music were AI-generated when it transpired they had never given interviews nor had any record of performing live.

However, their profile now identifies them as a "synthetic music project... with the support of artificial intelligence," with 126,000 monthly listeners.

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