Deezer says 44% of all new music uploaded to its platform daily is AI-generated, and that number explains why TIDAL AI music monetization rules now matter. TIDAL is right to cut off royalties for fully AI-generated tracks. This is not a culture-war gesture. It’s a necessary line in the sand for streaming economics, artist trust, and the value of human-made music.
According to TechCrunch, TIDAL will stop fully AI-generated music from making money on its service starting July 15, 2026. Tracks deemed 100% AI will be labeled with an “AI” badge, blocked from monetization, barred from collecting royalties, and made ineligible for direct-to-fan sales.
That distinction matters. TIDAL isn’t banning experimentation. It’s saying synthetic output shouldn’t automatically compete for the same economic rewards as working artists.
“Regardless of what you are reading elsewhere, AI’s takeover of the music industry (and your recommendations) isn’t inevitable if we take even greater steps now to monitor and control it,” noted Tony Gervino.
TIDAL Is Right to Stop AI-Generated Music From Cashing Royalty Checks
The strongest part of TIDAL’s move is that it targets the money, not the mere existence of AI music. A platform can allow AI tracks to sit in its catalog while refusing to treat them as royalty-earning works on equal footing with artists who build careers, audiences, and catalogs under their own names.
That’s the right pressure point. If fully synthetic music can earn royalties, collect direct-to-fan revenue, and drift into recommendation flows, then platforms reward output volume before artistic identity.
TIDAL EVP and Editor-in-Chief Tony Gervino framed the policy as a defense of “organic creativity,” while saying the goal is not to “bash technological advancement.” That’s a smart line to draw. AI can be a tool. A fake artist pipeline is something else.
AI Music Turns Streaming’s Weakest Incentive Into a Bigger Problem
Streaming already favors abundance. More tracks, more plays, more chances to surface in feeds and playlists. Fully AI-generated music fits that incentive too neatly.
XOOMAR analysis: if a platform lets 100% AI tracks monetize under the same eligibility rules as human-made music, it invites a flood of low-cost supply. The issue isn’t whether every AI song is bad. The issue is that synthetic music can be produced at a scale that human artists can’t reasonably match.
That creates a basic economic problem. Every monetized AI track competing for listener attention can also compete for payouts, placement, and direct commerce. TIDAL’s policy says the service won’t reward that model by default.
Other platforms are already drawing their own lines:
| Platform | AI music approach cited in source material |
|---|---|
| TIDAL | Labels fully AI-generated tracks, blocks monetization, royalties, and direct-to-fan sales |
| Spotify | Revamped policies to label AI music and better filter spam |
| Apple Music | Took a tagging approach |
| Deezer | Removes AI tracks from recommendations and excludes them from editorial playlists |
| Qobuz | Has developed its own AI music policy |
The common thread is obvious: platforms know passive neutrality won’t survive mass synthetic uploads.
TIDAL’s AI Monetization Ban Protects Artists From a Race to the Bottom
TIDAL’s AI monetization ban sends a message to labels, distributors, and anyone tempted to dump cheap synthetic tracks into streaming catalogs: presence is not payment.
That’s the right message. Human artists don’t just upload files. They build reputations, fan relationships, and bodies of work. TIDAL’s own statement ties the policy to protecting an artist’s ability to “connect with and build their fandom from TIDAL subscribers.”
Fully AI-generated music weakens that relationship when it impersonates artists or slides into listening paths without clear disclosure. TIDAL says it will use automated tools to remove AI-generated music that attempts to impersonate an artist or group. Good. Impersonation isn’t innovation. It’s deception with a beat.
The counter-pressure is real: more content means more inventory. But music platforms don’t win long term by becoming warehouses of disposable tracks. They win when discovery feels trustworthy.
The Real Fight Is Over Disclosure, Consent, and Who Gets Paid
The lazy version of this debate says it’s humans versus machines. The real fight is disclosure, consent, and monetization.
TIDAL’s “AI” badge is a start because listeners should know when they’re hearing a 100% AI track. That transparency also protects artists who use AI as one part of their process. A human musician using AI for composition, sound design, or production assistance should not be treated the same as a fully synthetic artist profile pushing machine-made output into the catalog.
The industry also needs sharper answers around voice, style, and catalog use. The supplied source does not detail TIDAL’s rules for AI training consent or attribution, so that remains unresolved. But the monetization rule creates a practical first barrier: fully AI-generated music doesn’t get paid just because it exists.
AI itself isn’t the villain. The same broad technology can produce serious value in other contexts, as seen in AI Cracks Vesuvius Papyrus Scroll Sealed in Carbon. And the hardware side of AI has become a major consumer-tech story, visible in coverage like 5 Prime Day GPU Deals Slash $175 Off Nvidia, AMD Cards. Music royalties are different because they directly affect who gets paid for creative work.
The Counterargument: Cutting Off AI Royalties Could Punish Legitimate Creators
The best argument against TIDAL’s policy is enforcement risk. Some real musicians use AI creatively. Some use it for accessibility. Some may generate elements, textures, or drafts without handing the whole track to a model.
That’s why TIDAL’s distinction between fully AI-generated music and AI-assisted work has to be precise. If the rules are vague, artists could get mislabeled. If the detection tools are wrong, legitimate releases could lose revenue or visibility.
TIDAL calls the policy a “living document,” which is the right posture. But “living” can’t mean opaque. The platform needs clear definitions, notice to uploaders, and an appeals path when tracks are tagged incorrectly.
A tough rule is only fair if creators can understand it and challenge mistakes.
Streaming Platforms Should Follow TIDAL Before AI Spam Becomes Normal
TIDAL is not alone. Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, and Qobuz have all developed policies for AI-generated music, according to the supplied source material. Deezer has gone further by excluding AI tracks from recommendations and editorial playlists, while also offering AI detection technology to rivals.
TIDAL’s move adds a sharper economic lever: demonetization.
That should become the industry baseline for fully AI-generated tracks. Label them. Block deceptive impersonation. Make distributors accountable for what they upload. Deny royalties to 100% AI content unless platforms and rights holders create a separate, clearly disclosed commercial category.
Listeners don’t subscribe to music services to browse infinite synthetic filler. They pay for discovery, taste, identity, and trust. If platforms let AI spam become normal, discovery becomes polluted and artist pages become less credible.
Pay Humans First, Then Build the Future of AI Music
AI can have a place in music. It can help artists sketch ideas, shape sounds, and work faster. But it can’t be allowed to quietly raid the royalty system while pretending to be just another artist.
TIDAL’s policy is not perfect, and the hard questions around detection, consent, and appeals are still open. But the principle is sound: pay humans first, then build rules for synthetic music in the open.
The next test is whether platforms treat monetization as the core battleground. If streaming wants a future worth listening to, it has to defend the people who make music worth paying for.
Impact Analysis
- TIDAL’s policy draws a financial boundary between fully synthetic output and human-made music.
- The move could influence how streaming platforms handle royalties as AI-generated uploads surge.
- Artists may see the policy as protection against volume-driven AI content competing for the same payouts.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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