YouTube unveils AI-powered tool to cleanly remove copyrighted music

zohaibahd

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Why it matters: If you're a YouTuber, dealing with copyright claims for music in your videos is probably a major headache. You spend hours crafting the perfect video, only for it to get flagged because you unknowingly used a copyrighted song in the background. Thankfully, YouTube has rolled out a new AI-powered tool to make removing copyrighted audio a breeze.

YouTube's "Erase Song" feature lets users precisely zap copyrighted tunes from their clips while keeping all the other audio intact. YouTube chief Neal Mohan hyped the new tool on X/Twitter, saying it will help easily remove copyright-claimed music from videos while preserving everything else.

The feature has actually been around for a while in beta form, but it hasn't always been on point. The updated version uses advanced AI algorithms to more accurately detect and isolate just the copyrighted music, so your voiceovers, sound effects, and such are untouched.

If the Erase Song tool somehow can't quite nail the removal, YouTube gives you the option to just mute the audio for any flagged segments containing copyrighted material.

"This edit might not work if the song is hard to remove. If this tool doesn't successfully remove the claim on a video, you can try other editing options, such as muting all sound in the claimed segments, or trimming out the claimed segments," the company noted on its support page.

It's not ideal, but it beats losing your whole video to a claim.

Getting started with the feature is simple. Head to YouTube Studio > Content, filter for Copyright claims, and find the video in question. In the Restrictions column, hover over Copyright and click "See Details." You'll see the specific claim – just click "Select Actions" and choose whether to trim out, replace, or mute the offending audio segment.

For creators, having an easy way to laser out copyrighted tunes from an otherwise perfect final video is great. Of course, the best solution is to avoid using copyrighted music in the first place. But since that's not always possible when shooting on location, editing over existing footage, or just making amateur mistakes, YouTube's new AI eraser provides a handy fix.

The updated Erase Song feature will be available on YouTube Studio desktop and mobile in the coming weeks.

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YouTube completely blocked (world-wide prohibition) a personal video of mine recorded during a family party in the early 90's because there was a song by the Beatles playing in the background. Although it's not essential, removing the song's audio totally screws up the party. So I uploaded the video in Rumble.
 
YouTube completely blocked (world-wide prohibition) a personal video of mine recorded during a family party in the early 90's because there was a song by the Beatles playing in the background. Although it's not essential, removing the song's audio totally screws up the party. So I uploaded the video in Rumble.

I've often wonder if people use YT solely as cloud for saving stuff, not saying that's your purpose here. I'm sure some people do. I mean have extended family all subscribed would even seem quite legit

Lots of ridiculous takedowns like yours , fair use , no one would use to actually listen to the song.
Thing is Paul McCarthy probably has little or no say in this BS
 
I've often wonder if people use YT solely as cloud for saving stuff, not saying that's your purpose here. I'm sure some people do. I mean have extended family all subscribed would even seem quite legit

Lots of ridiculous takedowns like yours , fair use , no one would use to actually listen to the song.
Thing is Paul McCarthy probably has little or no say in this BS
No, its the record labels and RIAA who seem to have the most arcane view of copyright possible just because it plumps up their bottom line and makes for a nice "ad" for when they want to sign on artists, what YouTube actually needs to deal woth more so is false DMCA or bogus copyright claims so only the clear copyright holder can raise a dispute, and not bob from the block
 
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