Apple Music has addressed an open letter to labels and industry partners, outlining its stance on AI-generated music. Titled "What We're Doing to Keep Music Fair," the letter presents a nuanced position: AI will not be banned, but strictly regulated – with clear labeling requirements, technical safeguards, and unusually transparent data.
With this open letter, Apple Music takes a stand in a debate that has gripped the music industry for months. The company's central message is that technology should enhance artists, not replace them. As early as March 2026, Apple Music was the first global streaming service to introduce transparency tags for AI-generated content, thus taking the first step toward a structured approach to AI-generated music. This current letter elaborates on this position – and provides, for the first time, hard data on the actual adoption of AI-generated music.
Less than one percent: The current significance of AI music
Apple puts the share of AI-generated music in Apple Music plays at well under one percent. This figure is relevant because it defuses the drama surrounding the discussion: AI music is real, but so far it doesn't pose a systemic threat to human artists. Apple explicitly sees the technology as an opportunity – for example, for new forms of storytelling and innovative creative tools (via 9to5mac).
The company's central condition: AI-generated content must be clearly labeled and must not be misleading. Anyone who publishes a song under a false identity or clones a well-known artist's image violates the platform's rules.
Three technical protection mechanisms
In the letter, Apple describes three specific technical layers designed to curb AI abuse:
Metadata tagging. The AI tags, mandatory since March, are now being rolled out by top distributors. In the future, this labeling will become mandatory for all providers. Currently, the tags are not yet visible to end users in the Music app interface – Apple is initially collecting data and monitoring market developments.
Proprietary detection tools. Apple has developed internal tools that identify AI content and are used to combat fraud, spam, and imitation. As soon as the majority of plays for an AI-generated song are found to be from stream manipulation, the service automatically removes the song from its catalog.
Stricter sanctions. In February 2026, Apple doubled the penalties for extreme cases of stream manipulation. Its in-house Music Style Guide also explicitly prohibits the misleading use of AI – a documented set of rules that provides a clear basis for future complaints and sanctions.
Two billion manipulated streams blocked
Regarding stream manipulation, Apple presents a remarkable annual report: In 2025, the service excluded approximately two billion manipulated streams. The associated royalties did not go to the manipulators, but were returned to the general payout pool – thus benefiting other artists.
According to Apple, the rate of manipulated streams on Apple Music is below 0.5 percent, placing it, as the company itself emphasizes, at the lowest end of the industry. This figure should be understood as an industry signal: Apple is positioning itself as a platform with an exceptionally reliable payout system.
Human curation as a core promise
Despite all the AI safeguards, Apple emphasizes one point: editorial work remains the backbone of the service. The editorial team continues to curate playlists, highlight artists, and develop recommendation systems. This positioning deliberately distinguishes Apple Music from a purely algorithm-driven logic, which is more prominent among competitors.
At the same time, Apple seamlessly integrates AI into other parts of the product. AutoMix creates smooth transitions between songs, and Playlist Playground allows users to create playlists using natural language input. Both features were rolled out as part of the new Apple Music features in iOS 26.4 and demonstrate how Apple uses AI as a tool for product enhancement without altering the artist's status.
A line between shelter and market opening
The letter works on two levels. Externally, it sends a signal to labels, publishers, and artists: Apple Music wants to be perceived as a reliable partner – with clear rules and transparent sanctions. Internally, the letter marks the refinement of a strategy that doesn't exclude AI but integrates it into a controlled framework. Artists and labels releasing music on the platform now know the rules and the consequences of violations.
With figures like two billion blocked streams and a manipulation rate of less than 0.5 percent, Apple quantitatively reinforces this position – this is unusual in the streaming industry and puts pressure on competitors to provide similar transparency. The question of which streaming service is most worthwhile for one's own use thus gains an additional dimension: It's no longer just about the catalog and audio quality, but also about how a provider handles AI content. (Image: Apple)
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