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Apple Music will know let you know if you’re listening to music made with AI

March 6, 2026 at 01:39 PM
By Liberty Dunworth
Apple Music will know let you know if you’re listening to music made with AI
The new feature will come into effect soon and was done to help “maintain a level and fair playing field for all creators and content providers alike” The post Apple Music will know let you know if you’re listening to music made with AI appeared first on NME.

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The new feature will come into effect soon and was done to help “maintain a level and fair playing field for all creators and content providers alike” The new feature will come into effect soon and was done to help “maintain a level and fair playing field for all creators and content providers alike Monitor developments in Apple for further updates.

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The new feature will come into effect soon and was done to help “maintain a level and fair playing f

The new feature will come into effect soon and was done to help “maintain a level and fair playing field for all creators and content providers alike” The post Apple Music will know let you know if you’re listening to music made with AI appeared first on NME. NewsMusic News Apple Music will know let you know if you’re listening to music made with AI The new feature will come into effect soon and was done to help “maintain a level and fair playing field for all creators and content providers alike” By Liberty Dunworth 6th March 2026 Apple Music logo. CREDIT: Nikos Pekiaridis/NurPhoto via Getty Images Apple Music will now let users know if they are listening to music that was made using AI. READ MORE: In the age of AI Oasis, there’s no point being ordinary According to Music Business Worldwide, Apple shared an update with industry partners and unveiled details of new transparency tags that will be introduced on its streaming platform. Advertisement Going forward, the tags will push for distributors to highlight when AI-generated content has been used, and it will be able to distinguish whether it was used in the music, the lyrics, the music video, or the artwork. At the moment, the label or distributor needs to manually choose if it wants to flag when artificial intelligence has been used, however, the new newsletter from Apple suggests that it will soon be “required” when uploading new content to the streaming service. It described the tags as a “concrete first step toward the transparency necessary for the industry to establish best practices and policies that work for everyone”. Apple also added that it has implemented the changes because of the changing landscape of the music industry, and because it wants to “remain focused on maintaining a level and fair playing field for all creators and content providers alike.” Apple Music introduces AI transparency tags to disclose when AI was used in artwork, tracks, compositions and music videos. pic.twitter.com/7XB5ISzjB8 — Pop Base (@PopBase) March 5, 2026 Recommended It is not clear when the transparency tags will be brought into full effect, nor what the repercussions will be for those who fail to disclose that AI has been used. The update from Apple is shared after a study, conducted last year, revealed that 97 per cent of people “can’t tell the difference” between real and AI music. Before then, figures in 2024 warned that people working in music were likely to lose a quarter of their income to AI over the following four years. As well as Apple, Deezer has also tackled the rise of AI-generated content – which it said in September made up 28 per cent of content on the platform – sharing that it had demonetised 85 per cent of all AI-generated tracks on its site using an AI-detection tool. Bandcamp has banned all AI-created tracks too, saying: “We reserve the right to remove any music on suspicion of being AI-generated.” Advertisement Last year, Spotify confirmed that it was cracking down on AI as well, and removing 75million “spammy tracks” and targeting impersonators. That statement followed a report which claimed that AI-generated songs were being uploaded to dead musicians’ Spotify profiles without permission. Paul McCartney, Kate Bush and Elton John are among the major British artists to have urged Keir Starmer to protect the work of creatives, and the Prime Minister told NME in 2025 that the government were working to “get the balance right.” View this post on Instagram Last month, Google shared that it had given its virtual assistant Gemini the ability to create AI-generated music via its “most advanced music generation model yet”, Lyria 3. The tech giant claimed that the new feature was “developed with input from producers and musicians”, and would allow fans to “express, explore, and experiment with high-fidelity music, using prompts to create tracks with natural flow from note to note”. Last summer, an AI-generated ‘band’ called The Velvet Sundown made headlines after gaining around 400,000 monthly Spotify listeners – despite existing for less than a month by that point – and, at the start of 2026, a song that had earned millions of streams in Sweden was banned from music charts in the country because it was created by AI. Related TopicsAIApple You May Also Like Advertisement TRENDING James Ford talks us through the huge new War Child ‘Help(2)’ album – track-by-track The Kooks to play The Great Escape 20th anniversary show presented by NME ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ review: Tommy Shelby is back in business The biggest video game concerts you can’t miss in 2026 Chalk’s uncompromising dance-punk is fuelled by personal vulnerability and political questioning Advertisement More Stories Film News Controversial AI actor agency planning “digital universe” that will foster “new generation” of talent Music News User trolls Soulseek by overloading with thousands of Homer Simpson ‘covers’ Film News Matthew McConaughey says apprehensions around AI won’t last: “There’s too much money to be made, and it’s too productive” Music News Google gives Gemini the ability to make AI-generated music News ‘The Simpsons’ Bart actor Nancy Cartwright reas
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