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How does Shazam work?

perthirtysix.com

168 points by datadrivenangel 6 days ago · 41 comments

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swyx 4 days ago

related comments from Shazamers

- OG shazam paper https://www.ee.columbia.edu/~dpwe/papers/Wang03-shazam.pdf (he has a talk on youtube btw look it up if really care)

- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18069968 shazam employee blogpost

- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38538996 shazam cofounder endorsed explainer

- go algo repro https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41127726

as with all ML things... the code is much less % of the value than the data...

thakoppno 4 days ago

Perhaps obviously this is the same technique that enables ACR on TVs.

It occurs to me that Shazam has such a better reputation online because the intent and consent of the user is honored.

It makes me wonder if there couldn’t be an implementation on TVs that is similar and actually is a net positive for consumers. Basically would customers actually like TV ACR if the data wasn’t just going to sell more ads?

  • krustyburger 4 days ago

    So the value-add would be the consumer would get to find out the name of the show or movie that’s playing, the same info that also pops up if they hit the pause button?

    • thakoppno 4 days ago

      I was thinking more like interactive content. Do you remember when VH1 had a pop-up music video show?

      Shows could synchronize additional content that’d be visible when Shazam mode enabled.

      • flymasterv 4 days ago

        We did this on Fire Phone for live sports and audio based X-Ray cast info. It was, like everything about that phone, a really fun tech demo.

      • w-ll 4 days ago

        Pop. Pop. Pop Up Video.

    • zevyoura 3 days ago

      I find Youtube's watch history helpful, having that across everything I watched on my device would be even better.

larodi 4 days ago

There's an algo called dynamic time warping (DTW) and is very often overlooked. My wild guess would be is at play @Shazam.

  • old_bayes 4 days ago

    Ayyy I used DTW to track bots on a certain social media site. They tend to act in herds so DTW helps smooth out delayed, repeat actions.

    • larodi 4 days ago

      Is a brilliant algo, and also works for multi-dim data. U can choose different distance functions - still works. Perhaps Dijkstra-shortest-path level significant for the robotic/ai era.

Animats 4 days ago

Recognizing a recording isn't hard to do, because, for the same recording, the chords follow each other with precisely repeatable timing. That's been around for well over a decade. Recognizing a different recording, say, a, cover version, of the same song, is much more work.

Audible Magic claims to be able to recognize multiple performances of the same songs, and even parodies.[1] Using, of course, "AI technology" and much more compute.

[1] https://www.audiblemagic.com/2024/02/07/identifying-cover-so...

  • Gigachad 4 days ago

    "Isn't hard to do" is doing some heavy lifting. Obviously on a society level it's simple tech we managed ages ago. But I would bet if you tasked individual devs at building it without looking up the answer, very few could do it.

  • bitexploder 4 days ago

    20 years at least. I remember seeing how Gracenote worked back in the day when I was consulting for them.

  • andai 4 days ago

    Why is this harder than "delete timing information" ?

sandos 4 days ago

Well, my latest guess is: not at all.

It has been working "fine" for me generally for popular music. But then I was at a ice skating competition where there were some really nice synth:y music going on in the pauses, and I used Shazam on several of the songs, and I tried several times on each. It did not find a single one correctly.

Either this was unreleased music or very small niched music or something, or Shazam totally failed?

  • nunez 4 days ago

    Yeah Shazam is mostly useless for songs that aren’t in the streaming apps, I’ve found. but not entirely useless! It sometimes matches me with stuff that’s only on YouTube.

  • IAmBroom 3 days ago

    Also useless on older music. I have used it to no avail for movies and old TV shows.

gnabgib 4 days ago

Again? Oh I see.. SCP (this domain is sus)

From CameronMacLeod (2022) - and much more complete analysis (587 points, 2023, 155 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38531428

Or Slate (2009) (50 points, 16 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=893353

  • BLKNSLVR 4 days ago

    Forgive my ignorance, but what does SCP mean in this context? (my normal go-to of 'secure copy' doesn't fit).

    Thanks for the other links, the question in this title is one I've day-dreamily thought about on occasion, but never dug into. Will have a read of all three.

  • cyral 4 days ago

    The interactive parts of this post are very cool though

SilverElfin 4 days ago

I feel like it does not work well. Shazam struggles to recognize music in real life environments that have some background noise, even with a lot of time. It’s much worse than the built in music recognition Google’s phones have, for example.

wrxd 4 days ago

Tangential. This is a cool website, so cool that I tried to subscribe to it in my RSS reader… and it didn’t work.

If any of the authors read this message, please consider adding a RSS feed and you’ve got a subscriber!

dataviz1000 4 days ago

Add to my list of projects. Dinosaur game but with audible clucks to jump.

cellular 4 days ago

I did this for a science project in 1986 on an Apple ][c computer !

rmnclmnt 4 days ago

Might be the best visual explainer of Shazam original audio fingerprinting algorithm from the 2003 paper (I guess they´ve switched to ML models at some point?)

yawpitch 4 days ago

This has been explained so many times… a wizard imbued the kid with the powers of Solomon, Hercules, Atlas, Zeus, Achilles, and Mercury.

G_o_D 4 days ago

Out of curiosity is it possible to prevent shazam like app from detecting maybe by adding noise or any technique ?

  • knodi123 4 days ago

    Not unless your noise is louder at certain dominant frequencies than the source. The article gives examples, but the algorithm basically throws away everything except frequency peaks, in order to make the lookups faster.

  • Gigachad 4 days ago

    Producers/DJs manage this one by just not releasing their music or edits for ages if ever.

krishna_dam 4 days ago

Surprised to see how that got it worked with out all the "AI" bluff

flyuk 4 days ago

Nice article - enjoyed reading!

blackjackfoe 4 days ago

No "AI" required!

dexihand 3 days ago

Cepstrum mentioned

wood_spirit 4 days ago

Reminds me of Roy Van Rijn’s prototype that got a cease and desist letter! Lots of community disappointment at the time!

https://hn.algolia.com/?q=royvanrijn

dackdel 4 days ago

voodoo

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