Let me preface this article with the following
statement.
I firmly believe that
content creators have an undeniable right to profit from their work.
That said, I do have a problem with a copyright system that
allows "owners" (which are
usually not the content creators) to assert claims on anything they
"believe" to be infringing without question by spineless
"services" like YouTube.
I also have a major problem with services that employ a
hostile process for redress of the "accused."
You're guilty with little opportunity to prove your
innocence. It shows up in dire legal verbiage
designed to scare away any challenge and immediate penalties that effectively
cripple the medium for the accused user.
In short, on YouTube a
copyright strike makes you guilty until proven innocent. It's a process that demands all but an admission of
"guilt" before allowing you to do anything further on the service
while the "infringement" is active.
In the end unless you live with a copyright attorney it's virtually
impossible to mount an effective "defense."
So in case you haven't guessed, I just had another run in
with YouTube but this one put the
proverbial nail in the coffin...
I'd been using the service (notice the tense there) for over 3 years and had hosted almost 300 videos
at one point. I have an active adsense
account that allowed me to participate in a revenue sharing agreement with YouTube by allowing them to place ads in
my content. A mutually beneficial arrangement
although the benefit was decidedly slanted toward YouTube.
Over the years I'd dealt with a few copyright claims for
music and game footage but none were ever elevated to the level of being an outright
DMCA copyright violation. My response
was fairly routine.
I'd either remove
the "alleged" offending content if I was feeling generous or if I
felt the claim invalid I'd contest it with varying degrees of success. Over the years I had actually won a few disputes
and got the so-called "owners" to back off. If I lost I usually just deleted the
offending video and was done with it.
I never intentionally tried to infringe anyone's copyright
but if somebody thought I was trying to take their bone I wasn't going to risk any
of my dogs fighting in a rigged game.
But this was different...
The videos in question were about 2 years old and were
simply some footage of a friend of mine testing Windows 8 Enterprise Evaluation
edition in a VM.
There was nothing about
the videos that was a privileged information even when they were initially
posted. In fact I never saw anything
obvious in Microsoft's EULA that mentioned a restriction on recording footage
of the OS.
Unfortunately for me, Microsoft decided yesterday that it
didn't like seeing footage of someone actually using their operating system and
subsequently filed a take down demand with YouTube.
Of course that's just supposition as YouTube almost never informs you of the exact "infringement" leaving you to guess. Only recently have they began testing of an editing tool capable of removing alleged copyrighted content identified by their ContentID system. Making every upload a coin toss...
Of course that's just supposition as YouTube almost never informs you of the exact "infringement" leaving you to guess. Only recently have they began testing of an editing tool capable of removing alleged copyrighted content identified by their ContentID system. Making every upload a coin toss...
Which means anyone who chooses to show a Windows desktop in
their video could soon find their content ripped off of YouTube without warning,
receive a copyright strike and never know why.
To me, this is nothing short of abuse of the copyright
system. It's bad enough that perpetual
copyrights have become the norm effectively shutting anything remotely commercial
in the past 50 years out of the public domain.
Now anything that even resembles or has elements of a copyrighted work
can be suppressed.
We're not talking about someone posting some unreleased Hollywood
Blockbuster or the latest music video featuring Beyonce's... assets.
It's about corporate bullying facilitated by a broken
copyright system with lapdogs like YouTube
doing their bidding.
And I've had enough...
YouTube always sides with the accuser and as I already
mentioned you're given feeble mechanisms for rebuttal.
This latest insult was the final straw and my response was
to delete the entire channel. I'd rather
sacrifice 3 years of work than suffer the Scarlet Letter foisted on me.
Now some may say I'm in the wrong and list the myriad of
ways a copyright holder can claim the exclusive right to distribute anything
related to their "property."
Perhaps as things are now that's so but again I reiterate,
this was not content that denied anyone their payday.
I like analogies so let's try one that is a little less
ambiguous than a video of some geek clicking around a Windows desktop for an hour...
Imagine you've just bought a brand new car. It's the first one you've ever had and it's
exactly what you wanted. You're bursting
with pride and want to show it off to all your friends and family on the
Internet.
So you record a video, spend hours editing it till it's
perfect, upload it to YouTube and send
everyone a link who cares to have it.
A month goes by and suddenly your video gets a takedown
notice and you get a copyright strike against your account.
Why? Because the
manufacturer of your brand new car claims that they have the exclusive right to
any exhibition of it.
Seem ridiculous? It
is but that's how the copyright system currently works. All an "owner" has to do is make a
claim and YouTube will dutifully
begin prosecuting you.
Which is why I've deleted the channel and removed all the
content.
It's bad enough that Google's acquisition of YouTube has resulted in the mass
suffering of its users by herding everyone into Google Plus whether they wanted
it or not.
Add in constant attacks by prepubescent teens and quasi-sociopaths determined to destroy your self esteem and your dreams of PewdiePie fandom soon evaporate.
Add in constant attacks by prepubescent teens and quasi-sociopaths determined to destroy your self esteem and your dreams of PewdiePie fandom soon evaporate.
All of that I can deal with.
When you put your stuff out there for all to see you learn to develop a
thick skin.
But when I get branded as a criminal with YouTube as proxy Judge, Jury and
Executioner to pass "sentence" it's a step too far.
YouTube's
copyright enforcement system is flawed, ambiguous and to my mind designed that
way.
Hiding behind the shield of
"Safe Harbor" they fail to define what constitutes an
"infringement" in order to profit off the legitimate work of millions
of YouTube creators. At least until such time as someone makes a claim
against you be it legitimate or otherwise.
Leaving a bewildered user base potentially branded as criminals without
recourse.
This is one content creator that's had enough.
I'm tired of the constant badgering of copyright trolls with
YouTube's blessing and no
recourse. I'm tired of finding my videos
mysteriously losing monetization without warning or reason. I'm tired of YouTube's flawed "ContentID" system throwing innocent
users into copyright disputes based on false positives.
But ultimately, I'm just tired of participating in an
abusive relationship.
Or maybe I'm just tired of writing about A-holes...
UPDATE!
Apparently I wasn't the only one getting screwed over by Microsoft and thousands of other YouTubers including some Microsoft employees suffered the same treatment at the hands of a 3rd party marketing agency called "Marketly." They decided to slap a takedown notice on just about anyone with "Windows" in their video's title.
When I checked my account today, I no longer found a copyright strike although I'm unsure whether that was because I deleted the channel or the takedown was released. I will risk uploading the same "offending" videos in a new channel focused on IT this week and see what happens.
UPDATE!
Apparently I wasn't the only one getting screwed over by Microsoft and thousands of other YouTubers including some Microsoft employees suffered the same treatment at the hands of a 3rd party marketing agency called "Marketly." They decided to slap a takedown notice on just about anyone with "Windows" in their video's title.
When I checked my account today, I no longer found a copyright strike although I'm unsure whether that was because I deleted the channel or the takedown was released. I will risk uploading the same "offending" videos in a new channel focused on IT this week and see what happens.
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