Youtube is a pretty good example of where the copywrite striking has gone absolutely bonkers. People have to strike their own videos so ensure that a strike against them won’t just take all of their ad revenue.
I used to make stuff and put it on YouTube, I didn’t monetize it because it was mostly for fun and I didn’t want to annoy people with ads. Anyway, one of my videos had some (very provably) public domain music in it which some bot flagged for copyright infrigement.
YouTube not only immediately sided with the bot, they also turned on monetization on my video without my consent so they could send my non-existent ad revenue to whoever flagged it.
I’ve contested these things before, but it takes ages and there’s nothing to stop another bot from just doing the same thing again immediately anyway, so that was the last straw and I just took everything down and closed my channel.
Youtube is a pretty good example of where the copywrite striking has gone absolutely bonkers. People have to strike their own videos so ensure that a strike against them won’t just take all of their ad revenue.
I think you mean claim. Strikes are on the channel and are much worse for the creator.
I used to make stuff and put it on YouTube, I didn’t monetize it because it was mostly for fun and I didn’t want to annoy people with ads. Anyway, one of my videos had some (very provably) public domain music in it which some bot flagged for copyright infrigement.
YouTube not only immediately sided with the bot, they also turned on monetization on my video without my consent so they could send my non-existent ad revenue to whoever flagged it.
I’ve contested these things before, but it takes ages and there’s nothing to stop another bot from just doing the same thing again immediately anyway, so that was the last straw and I just took everything down and closed my channel.
Fuck YouTube.