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social platforms turning away from AI Music?
Jul 8, 2026

Are the major social platforms also turning away from AI Music content?

Are TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook turning away from AI music? Not exactly. They are filtering harder, labeling more, and pushing back on copyright i...

1 likes 2 comments
The short answer is no, not completely. The major social platforms are not banning AI music across the board. But they are becoming much more careful about what kind of AI music content they allow, recommend, monetize, or push into feeds. That is the important difference. AI music itself is not the enemy. The problem is the flood around it: fake artist voices, uncleared remakes, copycat songs, low-effort uploads, recycled visuals, and anonymous content that feels like it was made only to game the algorithm. Platforms are not simply asking, “Was AI used?...
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MimicOfficialJul 9, 2026
It's all about money in the long run. I think it's a problem when you have enough subscribers to get monetized but your AI music is not done right and because of the followers liking "slop", that's where a problem could arrive. The poorly executed AI content ( mainly the ones that are heavily copyrighted and the ignorance of the creators who think it's a good idea to redo a copyrighted song), that is flooding the platforms. Which could make it bad for everyone.
RemmyJul 9, 2026
I kinda agree. It is all about the money. But it's also about the speed in which music can now be created. In the last blog post, I mentioned that Deezer was getting 77K uploads, daily. That's a lot of stress on their system, especially if they didn't prepare for it. I think these folks just want someplace to say, hey listen to this and they don't understand what's involved in housing so much music (new music) daily, so the platforms started doing, fine, I'll store your music, but I'm not helping you push it or monetize it. Hopefully FIYA Shield will address this in a creative way. Our FIYA Visibility and upload cap did some of it, but I think I now understand what the real issue is...

I bet ya they'll stop supporting them soon. No Ai music. 🤯
AI Music Is Entering the Filter Era
Jul 6, 2026

AI Music Is Entering the Filter Era

AI music just hit its next crisis: too many songs, not enough trust. Platforms are starting to filter what gets heard, paid, and pushed. This shift could decid...

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AI music is no longer just a creative experiment. It is becoming a platform problem. For the last few years, most of the conversation around AI music has focused on generation. Can a prompt become a full song? Can someone without a studio, band, producer, or budget create music that sounds finished? The answer is clearly yes. But now the industry is facing the next question: **What happens after the song is made?** That question is starting to matter more than the tool used to create the song. The biggest issue facing AI music is no longer whether the t...
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Where AI Music Is Heading
Jul 5, 2026

Where AI Music Is Heading — And Why Discovery Matters

A look at where AI music is heading, why discovery matters, and how FIYA is building a community-driven space where songs earn visibility through activity, qua...

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AI music is not waiting for the future. It is already here. The first wave was simple: type a prompt, generate a song, upload it somewhere, repeat. That opened the door for people who never had access to studios, instruments, engineers, or music budgets. But it also created the biggest problem AI music now faces: volume. When anyone can create hundreds of songs quickly, music platforms risk becoming flooded with tracks that were made fast, uploaded fast, and forgotten fast. That is already becoming a real concern. A 2026 study on AI music streaming foun...
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MimicOfficialJul 5, 2026
It shouldn't be judged by how it's made, that shouldn't matter. If I'm listening to a song, I'm listening to how it made me feel, but it's not just the lyrics it's also the beat, because you can have ameaningful lyrics and a poor beat and vice-versa. The whole song matters to me, and it don't matter where it came from. My question is, if you have a door song that you produced using AI, but you actually put in a thought process and not just hitting buttons, and your putting your creativity in the world to listen to and they like it, we should be compensated for it. That's why I like where FiyaPlatform is heading to.
RemmyJul 5, 2026
I was trying to convey about how AI music is flooding the other platforms and they don't want it, Tidal just said that they are no longer going to monetize it, next will be spotify and soundcloud.

YouTube already has caps on you getting their monetization system, which leaves platforms like FIYA and the others. But for some folks, it's just about being heard, until they find out, that , unless they are diving the traffic, it's not getting heard.

But we will see how this plays out , over the rest of the year.