
If the problem is with pure vocal content as well, you could try to filter it heavily and that might work.

Thus, to address your original problem, one solution would be to detect musical content (based on spectral analysis) and cut it from the original audio. If I am not mistaken, Content ID blocks you because of musical content, rather than vocal content.
HOW TO BYPASS BEATS AUDIO SOFTWARE HOW TO
How to use Youtube to get your subtitles anyway Otherwise, everyone would change the pitch of their videos and cheat on Content ID easily. Obviously, as Content ID is a private algorithm developed by Google, no one can know for sure how do they detect copyrighted audio in a video.īut, we can assume that one of the first things they did was to make their algorithm pitch-independent. No one can know how to cheat on Content ID I'm hoping this post doesn't breach any rules on here, and I can't stress enough that I'm not looking to publish these mp3s, I just want the auto-generated SRTs. Is there anything else I can do to the audio other than adjusting the pitch that might work?

Is there a way to manipulate the audio to bypass YouTube's content ID system? I've tried altering the pitch in Audacity, but it doesn't matter how subtle or extreme the pitch change is, they're still flagged as having copyrighted content. I have no desire to publish the mp3s on YouTube, they're uploaded as unlisted videos and all I require are the SRT files. The issue I'm having though is that a few of the mp3 files I've uploaded have been flagged as having copyrighted content, and as such no auto-generated captions have been made for them.

I do this by first converting the mp3 to a blank mp4, uploading to YouTube, waiting for the auto generated captions to appear, then extracting the SRT file. I'm using YouTube's "auto-generated" captions feature to generate transcripts of mp3 files.
