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How college photo-sharing app Swsh became an AI-powered fan data business backed by Scooter Braun

Swsh, a college photo-sharing app turned AI-powered fan engagement platform, raised a $4 million seed round led by Game Changers Ventures with backing from Scooter Braun. The company pivoted to sell AI-parsed fan content to major labels like Sony and Warner, aiming to solve the live events industry's data gap. Founder Alexandra Debow says Swsh's explicit consent screens mitigate biometric privacy legal risks.

read5 min views1 publishedJun 16, 2026

Alexandra Debow was building a photo-sharing app for sorority girls when she accidentally stumbled into a $200 billion industry’s biggest blind spot.

The 24-year-old Thiel Fellow is the founder and CEO of Swsh—a fan engagement platform for live experiences. The company raised a $4 million seed round, Fortune has exclusively learned. Game Changers Ventures led the round, with participation from Stellation Capital, SignalFire, and MaC Venture Capital. The angels include Scooter Braun, Guy Oseary, Morning Brew‘s Austin Rief, and GGV’s Hans Tung.

Swsh launched in 2022 as a shared photo album for college campuses—sororities, frat parties, anyone who wanted to find photos of themselves from the night before. But users kept dragging the app somewhere Swsh hadn’t planned for: “Over the weekends they’d create albums and bring them to sports events and artist events,” Debow told me. “We realized it wasn’t just the fan who really enjoyed this—it was also the brand, the business, the artist. They want to connect with their fans.”

So, Debow flipped the model: the consumer front end stays fan-first, but the back end now sells to Sony, Warner, UMG, and “hundreds of artists” who deploy Swsh on tour and collect all the content fans upload. The $5.9 billion fan engagement platform market alone is projected to reach 25.4 billion by 2034.

What Swsh collects is Debow’s suspected goldmine. Brands and artists leave live events with almost no structured data about who was in the room (meanwhile, Live Nation reported 159 million fans globally in 2025). Swsh routes fan-captured photos and videos into AI-parsed media libraries that can identify sponsor logos in crowd shots, merchandise people were wearing, even demographic patterns by time of night. “It’s basically having 100,000 documentary filmmakers capturing exactly what happened,” Debow said.

The obvious question is legal. AI photo discovery—the tool that lets fans instantly find photos of themselves across thousands of uploads—has generated billions in class-action liability lawsuits under state biometric privacy laws for companies larger than Swsh. Debow’s answer is structural: every upload triggers an explicit, plain-English consent screen—rights ownership, commercial use, the works—and fans can’t upload without agreeing. Each organizational partner also gets its own content review workflow, where uploads can be held in a waiting room before going live.

Debow’s broader argument is that the entire marketing industry is mid-pivot. SEO was gamed. Influencers lost the room.

“There’s a degradation of trust,” she told me. “People don’t trust one brief photo from a Taylor Swift concert. You trust seeing 20,000 videos in your feed.”

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