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 ad, every song, every broadcast — logged, verified, and attributable. This is the standard GlueArrow operates by.
A shared baseline for how partner stations report, log, and preserve their broadcasts — written plainly, enforced consistently.
The open-web crawler, the fingerprint match, and the five-tab admin dashboard that scores stations on what they reported versus what actually aired.
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.