AudioShake made its name with AI-powered stem-separation technology. Now it’s putting it to use for a new purpose: detecting copyrighted music in live and social video – and removing it.
This is aimed at broadcasters, sports leagues and other media creators who are broadcasting events live or creating video for social media.
According to AudioShake, they “routinely capture licensed songs in arenas, locker rooms, events, and public spaces – triggering copyright claims that can result in financial penalties, blocked global feeds, or fully muted audio”.
That’s what the company’s new tool aims to avoid, identifying music in real-time and then automatically removing it, without losing “dialogue, crowd noise, effects, and other ambient sound”.
“We’ve helped teams clean up archival footage, prep assets for international distribution, and meet the demands of social content at scale,” said CEO Jessica Powell on AudioShake’s expansion of its services.
“Now, with real-time capabilities, we’re unlocking entirely new use cases – from mobile apps and on-the-fly editing, to live broadcast cleanup and programmatic compliance checks.”
The launch follows AudioShake’s $14m funding round in early October, with the startup having grown to an 18-strong team since its launch in 2021.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source musically.com ’














