If you’ve streamed a song this year and wondered whether a human being actually wrote it, you’re not alone, and the music industry has finally decided to answer that question directly.
On July 10, 2026, the world’s leading music organizations, including the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), and the body behind the Grammy Awards, jointly announced a new labeling system designed to tell listeners exactly how much of a song was made by artificial intelligence, and how much came from a human artist.
Why This Matters to Anyone With a Spotify Account
For the millions of people worldwide, expats and travelers included, who default to a streaming playlist while working from a café in Canggu or unwinding after a day at the beach, this shift addresses something that’s been quietly unsettling about modern music: increasingly, you can’t tell what you’re actually listening to.
“We see fans wanting to know whether and how generative AI was used in a piece of music,” the CEOs of IFPI and RIAA said in a joint statement, as reported by The Straits Times. The goal, they explained, is a labeling system simple enough for casual listeners to understand, yet robust enough to be adopted across every major music platform globally.
Two Categories, One Clear Line
The new system splits AI-related music into two distinct labels.
Songs classified as “AI-generated” are those where most or all of the creative elements, vocals, instrumentation, composition, came from artificial intelligence, whether built entirely from a text prompt or featuring AI-generated lead vocals or key instruments.
The second category, “AI-assisted,” covers a very different kind of song: one still conceived and performed by human artists, where AI played a supporting role in producing certain expressive elements. Crucially, for a track to qualify as merely “AI-assisted,” the lead vocals and primary instruments must still be performed by an actual person.
It’s a distinction that matters more than it might first appear, separating songs where AI is essentially the artist from songs where AI is simply another tool in a human artist’s studio, not unlike autotune or a drum machine a generation ago.
A Problem Bigger Than It Sounds
The scale of what’s driving this move is striking. Deezer, one of the streaming platforms already flagging AI-made tracks automatically, revealed that nearly half of all new songs uploaded to its platform now contain AI-generated elements. The company’s AI Music Detector, launched in June, claims a 99.8% accuracy rate in identifying these tracks.
Apple Music’s numbers, while lower, are still eye-opening: an executive told Billboard earlier this year that more than a third of new uploads to the platform were created entirely using AI.
For an industry built for a century on the mythology of the human artist, that’s not a small shift. It’s an existential one.
The Streaming Giants Are Already Moving
The Digital Media Association (DIMA), which represents Apple Music, Spotify, and Amazon Music, has welcomed the new labeling framework, arguing that more accurate metadata will finally give listeners real transparency about what they’re hearing.
“DIMA has long encouraged creators, rights holders, and music distributors to provide accurate and timely metadata for all songs distributed to streaming services,” said DIMA CEO Graham Davies.
Spotify, notably, got ahead of the curve back in April with its own “Verified by Spotify” badge, confirming that a given artist’s identity has been authenticated, alongside broader measures aimed at preventing bad actors from using AI to impersonate real musicians.
What’s Next for Listeners
The labeling system is voluntary for now, not a regulatory mandate, which means its real test will be adoption. Whether every streaming platform actually implements it consistently, and whether artists and labels tag their releases honestly, remains an open question.
But for listeners abroad building playlists for beach days, road trips, or long flights home, the labels represent something increasingly rare in the streaming era: a straightforward answer to a simple question. Who, or what, actually made this song?
As generative AI continues reshaping how music gets made, that question is only going to matter more, not less.












































