Where catalogue is leaking
Mirror sites, leak feeds, unlicensed streams — ranked by severity.
ShadowCount tracks how your catalogue leaks — on mirror sites, on unlicensed DJ mixes, on stations that play but don't report. The numbers surface on the artist profile and the regulator's dashboard at the same time.
ShadowCount runs a continuous crawl across known mirror networks and leak channels, fingerprints what it finds, and matches against the canonical catalogue. The count publishes to the artist profile — and stays editable by the rights-holder.
ShadowCount compares what a station reportedto what SIRECORD actually detected. The gap is the compliance score — and it's public. Stations that report cleanly move up. Stations that under-report move down. The regulator sees the same page as the artist.
The admin dashboard is five tabs — Leakage, Stations, Profiles, Compliance, and the unified Activity Log. Each tab drills to the raw detection row that produced the number.
Mirror sites, leak feeds, unlicensed streams — ranked by severity.
Score per station, trendline, flag threshold.
Public badge on WikiGlue — leak count, compliance index, take-downs.
Every authority tasked with oversight of broadcast in a GlueArrow market is offered a read-only view of the same settlement ledger the platform runs on. The architecture is the policy.
The commitments a partner station makes when SIRECORD goes in the rack — written in plain language, numbered, and public. No small print, no side letters.
The platform runs on a ledger. The ledger is the source of every statement, every payout, every chart number. This is how, and how often, the books are opened for the reader.
If your catalogue is leaking, ShadowCount will find it. If a station is under-reporting, ShadowCount will grade it. Either way, the number is public.