Spotify’s 1,000-Stream Rule: Corporate Collusion Disguised as Policy

by Bryan Baker, GAJOOB

Spotify’s move to restrict royalty payments on tracks with fewer than 1,000 annual streams has drawn widespread ire, and for good reason. According to a recent report on Hypebot, the policy shift may have cost independent artists nearly $47 million in lost payouts—money that didn’t vanish, but was redirected to major labels.

Let’s be clear: this is not some quirky algorithmic oversight or a misunderstood effort to “weed out noise.” This is a deliberate act of collusion between Spotify and the major label system to funnel earnings from small, independent creators directly into the hands of music’s biggest stakeholders.

Spotify claims the change was about reducing “fraud” and cleaning up “non-artist noise”—but independent artists know better. We’ve always been the scapegoat for industry shifts that favor monopolistic giants. This isn’t about cleaning up the platform. It’s about consolidating money and power.

Worse, this appears to violate the spirit—if not the letter—of statutory royalty law. Royalties are not supposed to be discretionary. They’re owed to rights holders, regardless of whether the payout is pennies or thousands. For Spotify to unilaterally decide that some artists don’t meet an arbitrary stream threshold is tantamount to theft. It rewrites the rules of fair compensation and sets a dangerous precedent where platforms pick and choose who gets paid.

The losers? Independent musicians, home recordists, experimental artists, and anyone building a slow-burning catalog. The very people who made streaming catalogs rich with diversity are now being erased from the economics of streaming.

The winners? The same conglomerates that have controlled the industry for decades. Labels that negotiated deals with Spotify from a position of consolidated power. Spotify doesn’t need to cut checks to a million unknowns when they can roll that money up into bulk payments to the majors. It’s efficient, sure. But it’s not ethical, and it’s certainly not just.

The music community must push back. This isn’t just a business decision—it’s a class action-worthy shift in how artists are recognized and remunerated. If royalty laws exist to protect creators, they need to be enforced, not bypassed by backroom platform-label handshake deals.

Spotify can’t have it both ways—claiming to support artist discovery while financially undermining the very ecosystem that sustains independent art.

Update Former CDBaby CEO weighs in


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