Man who used 1,000 bots to stream AI songs pleads guilty in $8 million fraud case

midian182

Posts: 11,726   +177
Staff member
In a nutshell: A man charged with conning music services out of millions by uploading AI-generated music tracks and using an army of over 1,000 bots to repeatedly stream them has pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. He now faces up to five years in jail and has agreed to pay $8 million in forfeiture.

From 2017 to 2024, 52-year-old Michael Smith, from Cornelius, North Carolina, and his co-conspirators ran a large-scale fraud scheme that artificially boosted the stream counts of AI-generated songs across Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Music, and YouTube, according to court documents.

Instead of sending millions of plays to a small group of tracks and risking detection, Smith used a subtler tactic: acquiring hundreds of thousands of AI-made songs from a co-conspirator and spreading the streams across them in smaller amounts.

The tracks were uploaded under fake AI-generated artist names, including Calm Baseball, Calm Connected, Calm Knuckles, Calliope Bloom, Calliope Erratum, Callous, and Callous Humane.

At its height, the operation allegedly relied on 52 cloud service accounts, each running 20 bot accounts, for a total of 1,040 bots. Smith estimated that every account could stream about 636 songs per day while using VPNs to access the platforms, adding up to 661,440 daily streams.

Based on a royalty rate of half a cent per stream, he calculated that the setup could generate $3,307 per day, $99,216 per month, and more than $1.2 million per year.

In a February 2024 email, Smith claimed his songs had racked up more than 4 billion streams and earned more than $12 million in royalties since 2019 – a DOJ statement says he obtained more than $8 million in royalties.

Now, the US Attorney's Office has announced that Smith has pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

Smith is set to be sentenced on July 29, where he faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison. He has also agreed to forfeit $8,091,843.64.

"Michael Smith generated thousands of fake songs using artificial intelligence and then streamed those fake songs billions of times," said US Attorney Jay Clayton. "Although the songs and listeners were fake, the millions of dollars Smith stole was real. Millions of dollars in royalties that Smith diverted from real, deserving artists and rights holders. Smith's brazen scheme is over, as he stands convicted of a federal crime for his AI-assisted fraud."

The Guardian notes that the case has put the spotlight on AI-music-generating service Suno, which has 2 million subscribers. According to the US trade publication Billboard, Suno generates 7 million songs a day, which equates to a streamer's entire catalog of music every two weeks.

Permalink to story:

 
I used to laugh at the thought of AI generated music - I pictured something played on the Xylophone. Then I heard a song called "I see a Perfect Girl" by Anne Bloom. I understand she's an AI and I'll admit I'm really impressed. Can you be a little bit in love with the AI? Worrying.
 
What an ***** ... if I had just made 8 million id take it and run to a non-extradition country and set back up to keep going.. this chud deserves to go to prison for being so stupid...

should have just took the 8 million and rode off into the sunset ..
 
What an ***** ... if I had just made 8 million id take it and run to a non-extradition country and set back up to keep going.. this chud deserves to go to prison for being so stupid...

should have just took the 8 million and rode off into the sunset ..
I would have it transferred to an untraceable account and crypto so that even if I got caught I would still have the money.
 
I would have it transferred to an untraceable account and crypto so that even if I got caught I would still have the money.
1. What good is all that money when you're sitting in jail for years?
2. Your penalty would probably be even higher than $8 million for refusing to pay up, and all your assets would be seized
3. There's no such thing as "untraceable" on the internet, despite what you may believe

These fraudsters always get cocky and think they're uncatchable. Anyone remember the guy who ran Silk Road the dark web marketplace where you could buy drugs, guns, and even hire assassins? The guy who was running it was so delusional that he actually tried to hire someone to kill the FBI agent(s) investigating him. He figured he was untouchable because he was hiding behind "untraceable" VPN on the tor network. Guess where he is now?
 
This should have fallen on the streaming providers to tighten up their services. Instead, this guy is being labeled as a fraud when he really should be a driving force behind them improving their platforms. Sad.
 
"said US Attorney Jay Clayton. "Although the songs and listeners were fake, the millions of dollars Smith stole was real. Millions of dollars in royalties that Smith diverted from real, deserving artists and rights holders."

The attorney is clearly confused/lying. The guy shafted mega billion dollar companies who's primary income is shafting artists and rights holders. He did not divert money from artists at all, just corporate shareholders with such scale they never would have missed any of the lost funds. A rounding error on a Tuesday afternoon.

Stealing is wrong, but the lawyer pretending he's fighting for the people is pathetic.
 
The whole thing is clearly incredibly wasteful, both in the energy spent on creating such a trash heap of generic AI music and then again in streaming it billions of times to simulated listeners. It's outrageous.

But is it truly fraudulent or just gaming the incentive system that the industry has decided we must all use? I don't particularly have a great desire to 'stream' anything. I only do it because it's usually the only option that is available. I'd much rather have a download that I can then play as often as I like, on any device I care to.

But very few of these streaming 'services' allow downloads that can be listened to or watched outside of their stupid apps, which I actively dislike, and which may also simply disappear from one day to the next. Deezer is one of the few that does allow you to outright buy unencumbered music tracks, but it has a very limited selection and is also not available in a bunch of places.

So yeah. Not sure whether this guy is really a criminal or just a bit too clever for his own good.
 
Last edited:
1. What good is all that money when you're sitting in jail for years?
2. Your penalty would probably be even higher than $8 million for refusing to pay up, and all your assets would be seized
3. There's no such thing as "untraceable" on the internet, despite what you may believe

These fraudsters always get cocky and think they're uncatchable. Anyone remember the guy who ran Silk Road the dark web marketplace where you could buy drugs, guns, and even hire assassins? The guy who was running it was so delusional that he actually tried to hire someone to kill the FBI agent(s) investigating him. He figured he was untouchable because he was hiding behind "untraceable" VPN on the tor network. Guess where he is now?
While your primary point remains, if you're referring to Ross Ulbricht...he walks around a free man today.
 
Back