Sony removes a staggering 135,000 deepfake songs from music streaming services, but ‘labelling AI material is absolutely the next critical challenge’

The battle becomes a war

· TechRadar

News By Rowan Davies published 20 March 2026

(Image credit: Shutterstock / A.RICARDO)

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  • Sony Music pulls over 135,000 deepfakes impersonating its biggest artists
  • This includes acts like Beyoncé, Harry Styles, and Bad Bunny
  • Now industry giants are calling on music platforms to clearly label AI-generated content

The battle between the best music streaming services and AI-generated slop is still an ongoing conflict, and now Sony Music is getting involved — it’s removed over 135,000 deepfake songs of some of its most famous artists.

According to the music giant, the generative AI deepfakes were created to impersonate a slew of its biggest artists, including Harry Styles, Beyoncé, and Queen, with other artists such as Miley Cyrus and Bad Bunny potentially being affected. This figure was disclosed at the launch of the Global Music Report by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) earlier this week.

In a statement issued to the BBC, president of Sony's global digital business Dennis Kooker detailed the harm these deepfakes can cause, sharing, "In the worst cases, (the deepfakes) potentially damage a release campaign or tarnish the reputation of an artist”.

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Artist reputation aside, fraudulent AI slop causes huge damage to an artist’s financial gain. Kooker added, "That is when deepfakes are at their worst - building off and benefiting from the demand the artist has created (and) ultimately detracting from what the artist is trying to accomplish.” But the figures also reveal how fast AI slop and fraudulent streams are increasing.

Though Sony has removed the 135,000 AI-identified tracks, it’s possible this is only a portion of AI-generated content being uploaded across the likes of Spotify and Apple Music. Apparently, Sony Music flagged around 60,000 songs falsely claiming to be from its pool of artists since March last year, which the company also revealed in the report.

As it stands, music fans are running into AI-generated content on streaming platforms more often than they should be, which can be attributed to the fast development of AI models and their inexpensive accessibility. We’ve previously reported on this common issue with Spotify subscribers — but it’s not the only platform where AI slop is building up.

It’s got to the point where music industry giants are now actively calling on the leading streaming platforms to identify and flag AI-generated content, but while there are some measures already in place, it’s still a bit of a gray area.

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