Deezer says the flood of AI-made music on its service has accelerated sharply, with more than 2 million fully synthetic tracks now arriving each month. That works out at roughly 75,000 uploads a day, or about 44% of all new music added to the platform, according to the company’s latest figures.

The streaming group said its detection system has identified 13.4 million AI-generated tracks so far in 2025, underscoring how quickly tools such as Suno, Udio and Google’s Lyria are reshaping the supply of music. Deezer also said the material still makes up only a small slice of listening, accounting for around 1% to 3% of total streams.

Even so, the company is tightening its response. Deezer said it will stop storing high-resolution versions of AI-generated tracks and will continue to label them clearly, exclude them from recommendation systems and keep them out of editorial playlists. It also said it is filtering out fraudulent streams from royalty payments, a step intended to reduce abuse of the platform.

Chief executive Alexis Lanternier said the music industry needs to recognise that AI-generated songs are now part of everyday streaming and respond in a way that protects artists and keeps listeners informed. Deezer has been developing its detection technology for more than a year and has begun licensing the tool commercially, a sign that the company sees AI identification as both a defensive measure and a potential business line.

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Source: Noah Wire Services