Spotify Sued Over 'Billions' of Fraudulent Drake Streams (consequence.net)
- Reference: 0179956452
- News link: https://yro.slashdot.org/story/25/11/04/0011221/spotify-sued-over-billions-of-fraudulent-drake-streams
- Source link: https://consequence.net/2025/11/spotify-lawsuit-drake-streams/
> According to [2]Rolling Stone , the lawsuit alleges bot use is a widespread problem on Spotify. However, Drake is the only example named, based on "voluminous information" which the company "knows or should know" that proves a "substantial, non-trivial percentage" of his approximately 37 billion streams were "inauthentic and appeared to be the work of a sprawling network of Bot Accounts."
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> The complaint claims this alleged fraudulent activity took place between "January 2022 and September 2025," with an examination of "abnormal VPN usage" revealing at least 250,000 streams of Drake's song "No Face" during a four-day period in 2024 were actually from Turkey "but were falsely geomapped through the coordinated use of VPNs to the United Kingdom in [an] attempt to obscure their origins." Other notable allegations in the lawsuit are that "a large percentage" of accounts were concentrated in areas where the population could not support such a high volume of streams, including those with "zero residential addresses." The suit also points to "significant and irregular uptick months" for Drake's songs long after their release, as well as a "slower and less dramatic" downtick in streams compared to other artists.
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> Noting a "staggering and irregular" streaming of Drake's music by individuals, the suit also claims there are a "massive amount of accounts" listening to his songs "23 hours a day." Less than 2% of those users account for "roughly 15 percent" of his streams. "Drake's music accumulated far higher total streams compared to other highly streamed artists, even though those artists had far more 'users' than Drake," the lawsuit concludes.
[1] https://consequence.net/2025/11/spotify-lawsuit-drake-streams/
[2] https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/lawsuit-spotify-drake-streams-1235457737/
He is going really far (Score:1)
Drake is doing everything under his power to try to come back from the hole he dug himself into with all the Ls he took on that Kendrick beef. What a spectacular loser.
Release the Epstein files.
Re: (Score:2)
For the best of the boomers still scratching their heads, Drake lost a rap battle so badly that his response to this song was a lawsuit. [1]https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H58vbez_m4E
Re: (Score:2)
I hope everyone spoofs his shit, waters it down, changes the lyrics with AI, etc. eKarma!
Re: (Score:2)
You can't water Drake down more than Drake has already done himself. Well, maybe if you got in touch with his ghost writers.
As far as the AI stuff, that's already been done, in fact the first AI-generated music I heard was "AI Drake". I thought the guy who made it was trying to do some meta-meta commentary about Drake's music, but I could be reading too much into it.
Don't hate the player, hate the game. (Score:2)
If the system can be rigged it will be rigged. The haters are the ones that failed to rig it for themselves ... even though they tried.
No incentive to stop fraud (Score:2)
I never thought about it before, but the way Spotify has set its royalties up means it has 0 direct financial incentive to stop fraud. The money comes in from subscribers/ads, X percentage goes out as royalties no matter what they do. Given game theory, you'd literally have to sue to get them to do anything at all over the most blatant fraud possible.
Re: (Score:3)
Yup.
If they had to pay per streamed song, there would be no fraud because Spotify would stop that shit instantly.
Shocking (Score:3)
I am surprised theyâ(TM)re able to get access to enough Spotify data to conclude vpn usage. Iâ(TM)d have thought Spotify would be very cagey about giving access to any metrics.
Re: (Score:2)
I assume rightsholders demand those kind of logs as a condition of licensing their music. Because that data shows whether someone else is taking a cut out of "their" pot.
Something similar happened with Tidal years back, where people were able to obtain some kind of logs, and after combing through the data found it was falsified. Certain users were streaming certain albums 24 hours a day, and only listening to each song for about 3 seconds, among other things you can look up if you're curious. IIRC the artis
Re: Shocking (Score:2)
I hadnâ(TM)t heard about that issue. Iâ(TM)ll look it up thank you :).