Fate of Vancouver musician's long-lost song highlights growing problem of streaming fraud - Action News
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British Columbia

Fate of Vancouver musician's long-lost song highlights growing problem of streaming fraud

A Vancouver musician suspects she's the victim of streaming fraud, whichexperts say is a growing concern for streaming platforms, music distributors and artists.

Fake versions of song appeared on apps, in an example of fraud that siphons $2B US a year, B.C. company says

Photo of Paula Toledo in the mid-2000s. It is a black-and-white picture of a woman leaning against a brick wall.
Paula Toledo in a picture taken around the time she recorded How Long, a song that became the focus of a 16-year internet mystery. Now she says she's trying to figure why her song is not available on streaming services. (Shannon Eckstein)

Musician Paula Toledo recently learned one of her songshad found an audiencethrough an unlikely source bootleg Russian DVDs. But she didn't expect itwould lead to a fake version of it streaming online.

Toledo recorded How Long in the 2000s but never released it commercially. It somehow ended up on pirated DVDs, and caught the ears of a small circle of fans, who spent years trying to determine the song's provenance.

Some createdtribute videos for How Longthat includedimages of teddy bears. After 16 years of searching, fans on Reddit found Toledo in Vancouver back in December.

Following the discovery, Toledo uploaded How Long to Bandcamp, a music distribution platform, with all proceeds going to charity.She then added it to music streaming services such as Spotify and Apple Music, using an independent digital music distribution service as amiddleman.

But Reddit users soon notifiedher that a duplicate version of How Longhad appeared on streaming services, she says.

WATCH |International search for mystery singer ends in Vancouver

International search for mystery singer ends in Vancouver

10 months ago
Duration 9:43
About 16 years ago, a mystery song with no known singer or writer somehow captured the attention of a group of Reddit users. The group's sleuthing eventually led them to Vancouver's Paula Toledo. Gloria Macarenko speaks to Toledo and the moderator of the Reddit group about the search and the singer.

"So they took my song, the exact song, and put new artwork on it with a teddy bear," Toledo said.

The bogusversion created confusion, she says, andher versionwas removed fromstreaming services.

Toledo suspects her song fell victim tostreaming fraud, whichexperts say is a growing concern for streaming platforms, music distributors and artists.

"It's not lost on me that the song was pirated and it was placed in a Russian bootleg DVD Then it was found and literally weeks after it got pirated again," Toledo said.

"It's so unfortunate."

A picture of 3 white men posing in front of a wall of album covers.
Andrew Batey, centre, is pictured with fellow Beatdapp co-founders Pouria Assadipour, left, and Morgan Hayduk, right. Batey says the company, which recently secured $17 million USin funding, uses machine learning to root out music streaming fraud. (Min Lee)

Andrew Batey,founder and co-CEO of Beatdapp, a Vancouver-based company that uses technology to help streaming services and distributors sniff out fraud, says most fraud occurswhen scammersupload sound files through digital music distribution services to streaming sites.

They then program bots or steal other people's accounts to play the tracks over and over to collectroyalties.

The files don't have to containmusic. Theycan consist of things such as whale noises, or ambient sounds, Bateysays. Fraudstersalsouse musicrecorded by other artists.

"They load hundreds of thousands of songs on the platforms as if they're artists," he said.

"So they make fake labels ...they get music from various places, and they put music on the streaming platforms pretending to be artists."

CBC journalist Jon Azpiri explains what music streaming fraud is, and tells us about Beatdapp, a Vancouver company that helps music industry clients root out streaming fraud.

Frauddilutes the streamingroyalty pool

Toledo is concerned that How Longwas copied by fraudstersand sheis working to untanglewhathappened.

She says she has reached out to distributors and streaming platformsand hopes the situation will be rectified soon.

"It's just really unfortunate that in the music industry that there isn't more protection to protect the artists," she says. "I'm also very empathetic that [the industry] isdealing with it on probably a very large scale and these bad actors are very savvy."

Batey saysfraud affects big and small artists alike.

Most streaming services determine pay using a system called pro rata, which gathersthe total amount ofmoney generated from listeners each month, then dividesit proportionally by listening time in order to determine how much each artist should be paid.

Some fraud involves artists using bots to "juice" their streaming numbers and raise their profiles, Batey says. The vast majority around 80 per cent optto quietly rack up streams to get a bigger slice of the royalty pie.

One studyhas found that one to three per cent of streams in France in 2021were fake.

Batey estimates the number ismuch largerin the range of 10 per cent siphoningabout$2 billion US annually from legitimate artists and labels.

He notesthe French study examined the top 10,000 streamed songs in France. Much of the fraud occurs below the radar, he says.

"They want to be in the long tail ...meaning they only have a handful of streams against each song per day," he said.

"They do not want the limelight. They want no sunlight on them."

A smartphone is seen in front of a screen projection of Spotify logo, in this picture illustration taken April 1, 2018. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration - RC1BCDB28F90
A Spotify spokesperson says the company invests heavily in dealing with artificial streaming. (Dado Ruvic/Reuters)

There are times, Bateysays, when scam artists make a splash. He says he knows ofa well-known DJ who had one of his songs copied. Scammers timed the release of the bootlegged version to coincide with the real version. The bootleg ended up getting more prominent placement on streaming service playlist,with fraudsters cashing in.

Batey says Beatdapp works with the music industry to root out fraud, using machine learning to identify suspicious behaviour. The company says it hasa false positive rate below 0.001 per cent.

Beatdapp recently announced it raised $17 million USin funding and has formed partnerships withrights management SoundExchange and file-sharing service Napster as well as a collaboration with Universal Music Group.

Streaming fraud creates barriers for artists

In a statement, a Spotify spokesperson told CBC News the company invests heavily in detecting and dealing with artificial streaming.

The statement went on to say less than one per cent of its streams have been determined to be artificial.

"When we identify stream manipulation, we take action that may include removing streaming numbers and withholding royalties," the spokesperson said. "These actions allow us to protect royalty payouts for honest, hardworking artists."

The company said artists can report suspected copyright infringement online and the company will notify the content provider of the claim.

The company added that an artist who is having trouble uploading their content should take it up with their distributor.

CBCNews also reached out to Apple Music for comment but has not received a response.

Batey says fraud createsa challenging environment for musicians and music labels.

"[Artists] have to do 1,000 things correctly to truly make it. You're just adding another thing that makes it more difficult," Batey said.

"When they finally do make it, a lot of these fraudsters are stealing money not just from them,but everyone in the supply chain."

Toledo says she'sgrateful that her music was rediscovered. She wants to usethe opportunity tofocus on creating new music and buildingcommunity, rather than sorting through the world of distributors and streaming platforms.

Some of her other music remains on streaming services, but How Long, thesong at the centre of theonline mystery, remains offline. Shehopes she can figure outwhathappened.

"This is another level of mystery to me," she said.