AudioShake’s origin story is a startup using AI for stem-separation purposes, but over time it is branching out into something bigger. Its latest product shows how.
It’s called the ‘Copyright Compliance System’ and it is aimed at TV/film studios, broadcasters, sports organisations and video publishers.
The pitch: these companies are “sitting on enormous catalogs that are blocked from release because licensed music is baked into the original mix”.
AudioShake’s new system will detect and identify that music, but can also then remove and document it all, in an automated process. ESPN and NFL Films are among the first clients, while music-rights administration firm Music Reports is a partner.
AudioShake’s launch blog-post has more details and case studies to show how the system works.
Its launch follows AudioShake’s announcement last December of its tech for detecting and removing copyrighted music in live and social video, shortly after the startup raised a $14m funding round.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source musically.com ’














