The music industry continues to face significant challenges related to royalty payments and streaming revenue distribution, especially for independent artists. A major issue arises from the complicated process of registering songs properly, which often results in lost or unclaimed royalties. Many independent musicians are advised to ensure their songs are registered, but the reality is that registration involves multiple steps, including managing split sheets, metadata, and registrations with performing rights organizations (PROs) such as ASCAP and BMI. This complexity can cause delays or errors that prevent artists from receiving the money they have earned.
A new platform called Lumoza aims to tackle this problem by simplifying the registration and rights management process. It provides creators with a unified system to upload their tracks, verify contributor credits and ownership splits, and generate a “Digital Birth Certificate.” This certificate acts as an unchangeable record of who owns what percentage of a song from the moment it is finalized. This approach helps eliminate confusion over ownership and creates a clear chain of title that can be easily referenced by collaborators, publishers, or managers.
Lumoza also integrates directly with PROs, allowing artists to submit registrations through one streamlined workflow rather than navigating separate forms and portals. Its AI assistant, Lumi, automates much of the tedious administrative work by extracting metadata from audio files, identifying missing credits, preparing submission documents for PROs, and tracking registration status. By centralizing all these tasks, Lumoza addresses one of the biggest leaks in the music economy: unclaimed royalties caused by administrative friction.
Meanwhile, streaming platforms like Spotify have introduced new rules that affect how royalties are paid out. Spotify now requires tracks to reach at least 1,000 streams within a 12-month period before generating any royalties. While this policy is intended to reduce clutter from inactive or low-traffic tracks and make payouts more meaningful for active songs, it disproportionately impacts small and independent artists. Tracks that fall short of this threshold—even if they have hundreds of streams—do not earn any royalties. This makes it harder for emerging musicians without label support or marketing budgets to earn income from their music.
The combination of difficult registration processes and streaming payout thresholds highlights ongoing challenges in how music royalties are managed and distributed. Independent artists often struggle with both claiming their rightful earnings and meeting minimum streaming requirements to generate revenue. Innovations like Lumoza’s platform offer promising solutions by making rights management more accessible and transparent. However, streaming policies continue to create barriers for smaller creators trying to build their careers.
As the music industry evolves with digital technology, addressing these royalty challenges remains critical. Simplifying song registration and ensuring fairer revenue distribution will help support independent musicians and promote a healthier music ecosystem where creators are properly rewarded for their work.































