
TIDAL is tightening its rules around artificial intelligence in music, introducing a policy that cuts off monetization for tracks it deems fully AI‑generated and targets AI content that impersonates real artists.
The music streaming service will no longer allow 100% AI‑generated songs to earn royalties or participate in direct‑to‑fan sales on its platform, according to an announcement by Tony Gervino, TIDAL’s EVP and editor-in-chief. The policy takes effect on July 15, 2026, and is described by the company as a “living document” that may evolve as AI in music develops.
Under the new rules, TIDAL will label fully AI‑generated tracks with an “AI” badge so subscribers can clearly see when they are listening to music that is not human‑created. Any tracks flagged as 100% AI will:
- Be tagged with an “AI” indicator in the service
- Be ineligible for monetisation or royalty payouts
- Be excluded from direct-to-fan sales programs
Beyond demonetization, TIDAL says it will use automated systems to detect and remove AI-generated music that attempts to impersonate a specific artist or group. That places the service in line with a growing industry pushback against AI tracks that mimic the voices, styles or identities of real performers without their consent.
Gervino framed the move as a response to artists and listeners who are uneasy about fully synthetic music being surfaced or monetized alongside human work. “We are committed to protecting and rewarding organic creativity to avoid compromising an artist’s ability to connect with and build their fandom from TIDAL subscribers. Many have told us they do not want to be exposed to or prompted to listen to wholly AI-generated music,” he wrote.
He stressed that the policy is not designed to “bash technological advancement,” but to put the focus on “organic creativity” from artists, suggesting TIDAL is drawing a line specifically around fully AI-made content rather than all uses of AI tools in music production.
TIDAL’s stance lands in the middle of a broader recalibration happening across music streaming services as AI tracks flood their catalogues.
Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer and Qobuz have all introduced policies to deal with AI-generated music to varying degrees. Spotify has updated its rules to label AI-assisted content and better filter spam, while still acknowledging that AI tools will be used in parts of the creative process. Apple Music has likewise adopted tagging so listeners can see when AI is involved.
Deezer has taken a more aggressive approach. The company has said that 44% of all new music uploaded to its platform each day is AI-generated, and in response it actively removes AI tracks from recommendations and keeps them out of editorial playlists. Deezer has also built AI-detection tools that it offers to other platforms and a consumer-facing feature that lets users see if AI music has slipped into their playlists on rival services.
Against that backdrop, TIDAL is testing whether cutting off the money could be a stronger deterrent than simply labelling or downranking AI tracks. If fully synthetic music is still allowed to exist on the platform but cannot earn, the company appears to be betting that it will slow the flood of AI uploads that many users “aren’t interested in,” as the policy announcement notes.
“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,” Gervino wrote, positioning the move as a pre-emptive check on AI’s influence in music discovery.
For now, TIDAL is focusing on three pillars: visibility (through AI badges), economic disincentives (through demonetization and blocked sales), and brand protection (through automated removal of impersonating tracks). How precisely TIDAL will technically determine that a track is “100% AI” or is impersonating an artist was not detailed in the announcement, but the company’s description of the policy as a living document leaves room for the detection methods and thresholds to change over time.
As major streaming services experiment with labels, detection systems, moderation policies and now demonetization, TIDAL’s decision adds another model to how platforms may try to balance rapid advances in generative tools with the concerns of artists and audiences who say they want human-made work to remain clearly identified and financially prioritised.
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