A hit song has been excluded from Sweden’s official music chart after it was revealed the artist behind it is an AI creation. 'I know, you’re not mine' (Swedish: 'Jag vet, du är inte min') by Jacub topped Spotify’s Sweden streaming charts. However, IFPI Sweden, which compiles the official Sverigetopplistan chart, removed it after confirming the song is mainly AI-generated. An IFPI Sweden spokesperson said, “Jacub’s track has been excluded from Sweden’s official chart, Sverigetopplistan, which is compiled by IFPI Sweden. While the song appears on Spotify’s own charts, it does not qualify for inclusion on the official chart under the current rules.” CEO Ludvig Werber added, “Our rule is that if it is a song that is mainly AI-generated, it does not have the right to be on the top list.” The folk-pop song features acoustic guitar and has been streamed over 5 million times worldwide, with 200,000 streams in Sweden. It is from Jacub’s six-track EP 'Kärleken är Bränd' (Love is Burned). The song’s AI origins came to light after journalist Emanuel Karlsten found it was linked to Danish music publisher Stellar. Two credited rights holders work in Stellar’s AI department. Karlsten wrote that Stellar is exploring new music types and pushing limits with artificial music and artists. Stellar confirmed that Jacub’s voice and some music parts were created using AI tools but stressed the release had significant human creative input. The company said, “We are passionate and experienced music professionals who have invested large amounts of time, energy and dedication in the songwriting and production of this release.” Spotify does not require AI-labeling but is working against AI spam tracks that exploit royalty rules. Jacub is not the first AI artist to gain listeners; the Velvet Sundown, an AI band, reached over 1 million streams on Spotify before its AI origins surfaced. Composer Ed Newton-Rex criticized the lack of mandatory AI labeling. He said, “If Spotify told users when they were listening to AI music this wouldn’t have made it so high in the charts, taking streams and royalties away from human musicians.” Spotify supports a voluntary industry standard for AI disclosures created by nonprofit DDEX but does not force artists to label AI use. Spotify has been asked for comment.