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AI music is flooding streaming services — but who wants it?

26 days ago · The Verge · 18 views
AI music is flooding streaming services — but who wants it?
The Thrifty Streamer Take
What this means for your streaming budget
This AI music flood is less about a direct price hike and more about a massive drop in *value* for the average consumer. When every corner of Spotify and Apple Music is being filled with easily generated, generic tracks, it creates a huge risk of 'content fatigue.' For us budget-conscious subscribers, this means we need to be extremely careful not to pay premium rates for endless filler. The market is getting saturated, and while the content itself might be "free" in the sense that it's generated by an algorithm, the *curation*—the human effort that makes a service worth $10 a month—is what's at risk.

The takeaway here is that the sheer volume of AI music should encourage us to be more discerning with our cash. Don't feel obligated to keep a subscription just because the music library is huge. Instead, we need to treat our paid services like curated experiences, not just endless back catalogs. If you find yourself subscribing to multiple services just to find a specific *vibe* or genre, pause and rethink. Consider focusing your budget on services that offer exclusive, human-curated content—like specialized live artist feeds or unique documentary collections—rather than paying for the general noise.

In short, the proliferation of AI music means we can afford to be pickier. Before signing up for a new platform, ask yourself: Is this service offering a unique, irreplaceable experience that justifies its cost? If the answer is just "more music," you can likely save that $10–$15 monthly fee and put it toward a better, more focused subscription rotation.

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