Google Cloud adds 11 blockchains to data warehouse ‘BigQuery’
In 2018, Google launched a Bitcoin data set as part of the service, and later that year, it added Ethereum as well. It continued to expand its blockchain coverage in February 2019, adding Bitcoin Cash, Dash, Dogecoin, Ethereum Classic, Litecoin and Zcash. The Sept. 21 announcement means that BigQuery now carries data from a total of 19 blockchain networks. In addition to adding these new blockchains, Google has also implemented a new feature intended to make blockchain queries easier to execu...
DeFi activity on the decline, but investment rolls in: Finance Redefined
The team behind Balancer, an Ethereum-based automated market maker, believes a social engineering attack on its DNS service provider led to its website’s front end being compromised on Sept. 19, leading to an estimated $238,000 in crypto stolen. “After investigation, it is clear that this was a social engineering attack on EuroDNS, the domain registrar used for .fi TLDs,” the firm explained in a Sept. 20 X (formerly Twitter) post. Approximately eight hours after the first warning of the attac...
How is DeFi margin trading getting safer with this cross-chain protocol?
Earlier this month, a project called Miss Universe Coin was announced at PBW. Donald Lim, the founder of the organization managing the PBW, said during the event that the PBW will “launch the Miss Universe Coin.” However, weeks after the announcement, the official organization behind Miss Universe denied any association with the coin project and called it a fraud. “There is currently no Miss Universe cryptocurrency or blockchain offering, and these products are in no way involved with the vot...
I work in Web 3
Google Cloud adds 11 blockchains to data warehouse ‘BigQuery’
In 2018, Google launched a Bitcoin data set as part of the service, and later that year, it added Ethereum as well. It continued to expand its blockchain coverage in February 2019, adding Bitcoin Cash, Dash, Dogecoin, Ethereum Classic, Litecoin and Zcash. The Sept. 21 announcement means that BigQuery now carries data from a total of 19 blockchain networks. In addition to adding these new blockchains, Google has also implemented a new feature intended to make blockchain queries easier to execu...
DeFi activity on the decline, but investment rolls in: Finance Redefined
The team behind Balancer, an Ethereum-based automated market maker, believes a social engineering attack on its DNS service provider led to its website’s front end being compromised on Sept. 19, leading to an estimated $238,000 in crypto stolen. “After investigation, it is clear that this was a social engineering attack on EuroDNS, the domain registrar used for .fi TLDs,” the firm explained in a Sept. 20 X (formerly Twitter) post. Approximately eight hours after the first warning of the attac...
How is DeFi margin trading getting safer with this cross-chain protocol?
Earlier this month, a project called Miss Universe Coin was announced at PBW. Donald Lim, the founder of the organization managing the PBW, said during the event that the PBW will “launch the Miss Universe Coin.” However, weeks after the announcement, the official organization behind Miss Universe denied any association with the coin project and called it a fraud. “There is currently no Miss Universe cryptocurrency or blockchain offering, and these products are in no way involved with the vot...
I work in Web 3
Share Dialog
Share Dialog

Subscribe to Masih

Subscribe to Masih
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been making waves in various industries across the globe. However, the conflict between its usefulness and its ability to infringe on intellectual property (IP) has been a particular struggle in the creative industries.
Major players in the music industry, from artists and record labels to institutions like the Grammys and YouTube, have all had to factor in AI in some form.
As traditional spaces in the music industry deal with technology, new platforms are popping up that embrace the technology from the start are popping up. Musixy launched on Sept. 14 to serve as a streaming platform, label and marketplace for music exclusively generated by AI.
Cointelegraph spoke with Can Ansay, founder and CEO of Musixy, to better understand how giving AI-generated music its own space could shape the future music industry.
Musixy aims to become the “Spotify for AI hit songs,” particularly those that have been banned from other platforms. Over the last year, Spotify and other major streaming platforms have become more vigilant since Universal Music Group sent out an email asking them to step up their policing of copyrighted AI tracks.
Ansay said “the establishment,” or major labels, is in panic mode again, “as it was back then with Napster because they fear revenue losses due to a new disruptive technology.”
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been making waves in various industries across the globe. However, the conflict between its usefulness and its ability to infringe on intellectual property (IP) has been a particular struggle in the creative industries.
Major players in the music industry, from artists and record labels to institutions like the Grammys and YouTube, have all had to factor in AI in some form.
As traditional spaces in the music industry deal with technology, new platforms are popping up that embrace the technology from the start are popping up. Musixy launched on Sept. 14 to serve as a streaming platform, label and marketplace for music exclusively generated by AI.
Cointelegraph spoke with Can Ansay, founder and CEO of Musixy, to better understand how giving AI-generated music its own space could shape the future music industry.
Musixy aims to become the “Spotify for AI hit songs,” particularly those that have been banned from other platforms. Over the last year, Spotify and other major streaming platforms have become more vigilant since Universal Music Group sent out an email asking them to step up their policing of copyrighted AI tracks.
Ansay said “the establishment,” or major labels, is in panic mode again, “as it was back then with Napster because they fear revenue losses due to a new disruptive technology.”
No activity yet