Major labels, independent music representatives, and global rights organizations have formally introduced a unified system for tagging AI-generated songs on streaming platforms, a move designed to protect royalty pools and ensure transparency for rights holders. The initiative, led by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and the American Association of Independent Music (A2IM) alongside IFPI and other industry groups, addresses the rapid influx of artificial intelligence tracks that dilute payments for human artists.
Industry Coalition Forms to Combat Royalty Dilution
The new tagging framework responds to a critical business threat: approximately 100,000 AI-generated tracks are uploaded to streaming services daily, siphoning revenue from the shared royalty pool that funds human creators. Because streaming royalties are calculated by dividing a total pool by the number of streams, every non-human track added reduces the per-stream payout for legitimate artists and labels. Industry leaders argue that without clear identification, streaming companies face increased risk of paying out on content that may not be copyrightable under current U.S. law, as wholly AI-created works lack legal protection.
The coalition includes the RIAA, A2IM, IFPI, WIN, IMPALA, The Grammys, SAG-AFTRA, and the Human Artistry Campaign, signaling a rare cross-sector alignment between major labels, independents, and labor unions. This collaboration aims to establish mandatory disclosure standards that force platforms to label content generated by AI, ensuring listeners and rights administrators can distinguish between human and machine output.
Precedents and Platform Implementation Strategies
The push for tagging follows early adoption by French streaming service Deezer, which implemented an automatic tagging system for fully AI-generated recordings in 2025. Apple Music has also announced it will inform listeners if music is AI-generated, though the platform’s policy relies on labels and rights holders to declare the use of the technology rather than detecting it autonomously. The new industry system seeks to standardize these efforts globally, creating a consistent metadata tag that streaming services can integrate into their infrastructure.
For radio programmers and Black music professionals, this development clarifies the rights landscape surrounding AI content, which currently faces significant legal uncertainty regarding copyright eligibility. By mandating tags, the coalition ensures that streaming services can filter out non-protectable content from royalty calculations, preserving funds for human songwriters, session musicians, and performers who rely on streaming revenue as their primary income source. The initiative represents a direct business intervention to prevent the displacement of original recordings by algorithmically generated competitors.
For editorial consideration and industry coverage inquiries, contact Radio Facts.
