They are talking about the Fair Use Protection Program, the money put into legal battle for specific cases that are selected based on the case/etc. They are not testing general Fair Use cases. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/11/youtube-backs-its-users-new-fair-use-protection-program …
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Replying to @DragnixMod @TeamYouTube
Specifically, it's cases in which there could be specific precident set. It would come down to what precident could be set, how strong the case would be, etc.
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Replying to @DragnixMod @TeamYouTube
Regardless, my question had nothing to do with that (it was a deflection of the actual issue) and the copyright system in place favors the claimant over the creator. Point is, YouTube does in fact not care about Fair Use.
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Replying to @GamerThumbTV @TeamYouTube
All you posted was the response from what I saw. Exactly what was the question pointed to in the Youtube support staff?
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Replying to @DragnixMod @TeamYouTube
customer service at its finest basically (sarcasm)
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Replying to @GamerThumbTV @TeamYouTube
Do you have a copy of the video listed somewhere else (on another video site for example) that can be looked at? It may be a case where someone like
@TrustedFlagger or the youtube subreddit could help in terms of exposure.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
no I don't, just YouTube. I'm currently disputing. But I'm no stranger to false claims. Most of my movie reviews get hit, and I fought off countless claims with 100% success rate (so that says alot right there). Its a big waste of everybody's time and lost revenue for creators.
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I'm not arguing it's not. I get hit by claims too and feel ya. But I want people to realize that this goes beyond Youtube's section, it's the law itself. And while places like Twitch have dealt with it better, Youtube is more rounded in terms of type of content (1/?)
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Replying to @DragnixMod @GamerThumbTV and
The biggest problem right now is that the law/defense needs to be extended to show misintent: aka, the claimant needs to provide more details in the digital age of how the work infringes. Right now, there's no such protection, and thus, there's no consequence to these issues.
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Even Youtube themselves, and Twitch too (see music being a big issue right now in the Twitch world), are constantly having to deal with that landscape, and it's not a good one right now. And several of the services hands are tied.
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