The Mercury News

Apple buys Shazam app

The deal for the music discovery technology is valued at $400M

- Hayley Tsukayama

Apple on Monday confirmed it has bought Shazam, the music app that can identify a song by hearing just a snippet of it. The acquisitio­n boosts Apple’s position in the music world and advances its artificial intelligen­ce efforts.

Shazam, launched in 1999, claims that at least 1 billion people have downloaded its app and used it to identify songs at least 30 billion times. Its service was one of the first AI products to be used by a broad audience. As Apple faces other tech giants in this increasing­ly competitiv­e arena, analysts say Shazam could add significan­t value not only with its own service but also by making Apple’s AI products - namely Siri - smarter about music.

“We are thrilled that Shazam and its talented team will be joining Apple. Since the launch of the App Store, Shazam has consistent­ly ranked as one of the most popular apps for iOS,” Apple said in a statement Monday. “We have exciting plans in store, and we look forward to combining with Shazam upon approval of today’s agreement.”

Shazam confirmed the acquisitio­n in a statement of its own, which seemed to open the possibilit­y that the service would continue after the acquisitio­n. “Shazam is one of the highestrat­ed apps in the world and loved by hundreds of millions of users and we can’t imagine a better home for Shazam to enable us to continue innovating and delivering magic for our users,” the statement said.

Apple did not share further details about the agreement. Tech-

Crunch reported the deal is valued at $400 million, and that Snap and Spotify were also potential buyers.

Music is an important part of Apple’s business, particular­ly as the company prepares to launch its HomePod smart speaker. The speaker was originally slated for release this year, but Apple said last month that it would delay its debut until early next year.

The acquisitio­n is similar to one that Spotify, which leads Apple in the streaming music market, made in 2014 when it purchased a music intelligen­ce

firm called The Echo Nest. The Echo Nest creates technology that generates music recommenda­tions. Some saw the Shazam acquisitio­n as an answer to that deal.

“Shazam is Apple’s answer to Spotify’s Echo Nest,” wrote music industry analyst Mark Mulligan in a blog post. “Now, Apple will be hoping that Shazam will provide it with the tools to start playing catch up. And that’s not even mentioning the user acquisitio­n potential Shazam could have when it switches to exclusivel­y pointing to Apple Music. Game on.”

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