đ” Why Is Your Music Getting Flagged on Social Media? đ”
Letâs clear something up for all the indie artists, producers, and creators out there.
Many artists are confused (and frustrated) when their original music gets flagged for copyright or ownership violations on platforms like Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and YouTube. The truth? You might be unknowingly triggering these flags yourself.
Hereâs whatâs going on:
đ Youâre using a distributor to release your music, but not linking it properly.
If youâve released music via a distribution platform (like DistroKid, TuneCore, CD Baby, etc.) and you post that same music in your content without selecting it from the platformâs music library â it can get flagged. Why? Because the platform doesnât see it as yours â it sees it as licensed third-party content.
đ You registered with a PRO as a songwriter â but not as a publisher.
This is a common mistake. Registering as just a songwriter with BMI, ASCAP, or SESAC means youâre only covered halfway. Without a publisher account or owning your own publishing, your music is vulnerable to platform takedowns, because no one is officially claiming the content for usage and royalties across digital/social platforms.
đ Social platforms donât have time to dig into your ownership claim.
Theyâre not checking if youâre the creator â theyâre checking the licensing and metadata tied to the post. If your music isnât officially listed in their system, it gets flagged or muted.
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Tips to Avoid Getting Flagged:
1. Distribute to social platforms directly.
Make sure your distributor pushes your music to TikTok, Instagram, YouTube Shorts, Facebook Reels, etc.
2. Claim your artist pages.
Platforms like TikTok and Spotify allow you to claim your official artist profile â do it! This adds another layer of verification.
3. Use your music from the platformâs library.
When creating content, select your music from the official platform catalog (not by playing it from your phone or dropping it into your video editor).
4. Register as both songwriter AND publisher.
If you want to collect all your royalties and avoid confusion, make sure your publishing is sorted. You can create your own publishing entity or register with a service that helps with both.
When I create content for TikTok using my own music, I make sure my distributor sends my music directly to TikTok. Then, I select that track from TikTokâs official library. Iâve claimed my artist page, and I collect revenue through both distribution and publishing â no flags, no takedowns, no confusion.
đ€ Questions? Confused? Drop them in the comments!
Letâs help each other grow smarter in this music game.
#IndieArtistTips #MusicBusiness101 #CopyrightClarity #ContentCreation #MusicDistribution #JonKT #ProtectYourWork