Jaden Schaefer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
also has that feature.
So I go to the search bar in Google Music, hit the microphone, hum the song, and it actually pulled up the song right away.
And it was kind of a funny, obscure song.
But the point being, this is the exact same technology that Google is going to be using for... They've cracked this, basically, way better than even Apple's Shazam.
Because Apple's Shazam, you basically have to play the literal song.
Like, if you're in the grocery store, you Shazam, and it can tell you what song's playing on the PA.
Google is way better and you could just like hum the song in my horrible, probably off key humming.
So and it's able to pick it up.
So Google is going to do a great job of this.
I have no doubt.
I'm excited about this.
They have the right guardrails in place to not rip off artists.
And mostly I think they're just getting themselves out of lawsuits, but maybe even creators are going to stay out of lawsuits.
So it's kind of a win win for everyone.
Every single song that is generated with Lyria 3 is going to include a synth ID watermark.
So basically, this signals that it was created with AI.
You're not going to be able to hear this to just, you know, like a person listening to the music won't be able to tell.
But there's just some frequencies in there that you can put this into an AI detector and it'll be like, yes, this was AI generated.
Google's also adding some tools inside of Gemini that let users upload a track and then check if it contains synth ID markers.