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- Fake bands and artificial songs are taking over YouTube and . . .
In that time, the channel has published 135 music videos, many of them over 30 minutes long They have no moving images, just cover art and AI-generated music, and are accompanied by long, AI
- Imitation Bands and Synthetic Songs are Dominating YouTube . . .
The band is called Concubanas The description of the album Rumba Congo (1973), uploaded to YouTube, tells the entire story of the musicians that recorded it The
- Fake Bands and Artificial Songs are Taking Over YouTube and . . .
Spain's newspaper El Pais found an entire fake album on YouTube titled Rumba Congo (1973) And they cite a study from France's International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers that estimated revenue from AI-generated music will rise to $4 billion in 2028, generating 20% of all streaming platforms' revenue: One of the major problems with this trend is the lack of transparency
- False groups and artificial songs, to the assault of YouTube . . .
Synthetic Bands: The New Wave in Music Production In a revelation that’s sent shockwaves through the music community, the album “Rumba Congo” by the band “Concubanas,” uploaded to YouTube, has exposed the intriguing fusion of Cuban and Congolese music created entirely by AI
- Is That Even a Real Song? AI Tracks Are Taking Over Spotify . . .
Entirely Fake Albums Spanish newspaper El País uncovered an entirely fake album titled Rumba Congo (1973) on YouTube While YouTube requires creators to disclose when realistic content is AI
- AI-Generated Songs and Fake Listeners: A New Wave of Fraud on . . .
This artificial inflation of streams funnels real royalties into the pockets of these AI-driven schemers, exploiting the pay-per-stream model that platforms like Spotify and Apple Music rely on Streaming services are fighting back by removing suspicious tracks, often identifying them through sudden, unnatural spikes in popularity
- Its so dystopian AI streaming fraud is on the rise. This . . .
The fake Sweet Enoughs tracks also appeared across Apple Music, Tidal, YouTube Music, and Deezer or illegitimate promo services — to boost plays of artificial songs, albums, and artists
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