Spotify fails to detect King Gizzard AI impersonations
Spotify fails to detect King Gizzard AI impersonations
Occurred: December 2025
Page published: December 2025
Spotify failed to detect an AI-generated copycat artist of Australian rock band King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, raising serious questions about its ability to detect AI-generated songs effectively, as well as about its governance and ethics.
An impostor account named King Lizard Wizard appeared on Spotify, uploading AI-generated music that mimicked the psychedelic rock style of King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard.
The tracks featured titles and lyrics identical to the original band's songs, suggesting the use of generative AI trained on the band's work. One song, "Rattlesnake," reportedly amassed over 32,000 plays before the account was removed.
The AI copycat was discovered by fans on Spotify’s "Release Radar" algorithmic playlist after the content was uploaded, but it took weeks for Spotify to remove the offending material, and not before it had accumulated tens of thousands of streams.
Spotify stated that artist impersonation is prohibited and that no royalties were paid out for the streams generated by the fake account.
The incident occurred after King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard had removed their entire music catalogue from Spotify in July 2025 to protest CEO Daniel Ek's investment in the AI weapons company Helsing. The band's move was a high-profile, ethical stand against what they called "Dr. Evil tech bros."
The incident stems from a combination of accessible generative-AI music tools and weak, scale-driven moderation systems that rely heavily on automated detection and user reporting rather than proactive, manual checks for high‑risk cases.
The impersonator appears to have used King Gizzard’s existing lyrics and musical style as prompts for an unknown AI system, then uploaded the results under a confusingly similar name designed to capture search traffic and recommendation placements.
For King Gizzard, their collaborators, and fans, the AI impersonation confused listeners, diluted the band’s artistic identity, and diverted attention and potential income to an unauthorised clone that reuses their creative work without consent. It also undermined the band’s political act of leaving Spotify by reintroducing a distorted, AI-mediated version of their music onto the same service they protested.
For other artists and for society, the case highlights how easy it has become to fabricate convincing AI replicas of musicians and to distribute them at scale on mainstream platforms before any human review occurs. It raises wider questions about the adequacy of platform-level safeguards, the need for stronger verification, watermarking, and consent frameworks around the training and deployment of AI systems, and the broader risk that audiences will increasingly encounter manipulated or counterfeit cultural works presented as authentic.
AI slop
AI slop (sometimes shortened to just slop) is digital content made with generative artificial intelligence, specifically when perceived to show a lack of effort, quality or deeper meaning, and an overwhelming volume of production.
Source: Wikipedia 🔗
Unknown
Developer: Spotify
Country: Australia
Sector: Media/entertainment/sports/arts
Purpose: Detect AI impersonation material
Technology: Content moderation system; Machine learning
Issue: Accountability; Accuracy/reliability; Authenticity/integrity; Transparency
AIAAIC Repository ID: AIAAIC2157