New today
A policy preventing Copyright owners from making $ on manual claims for:
Short song clips (ex: 5 sec of a song)
Unintentional audio (ex:
from passing cars)
Claimants can still block monetization or the video itself, but timestamps help you edit out the claim.
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Replying to @TeamYouTube
is 5 seconds the maximum amount of time we can have before the audio can be claimed?
10 replies 7 retweets 777 likes -
Replying to @BoundaryBreak
5 secs was just an example– think single digit seconds of a song. There are special cases/exceptions like when an entire video is a compilation of short music clips. Instead of focusing on a time limit, remember that any use of music you don't own can result in a claim.
10 replies 32 retweets 1,464 likes -
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the reason for this is that UMG and SME won't claimed you video to put money in their pockets
1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @FlareFolfTTV @StudyWare and
but a problem with this is that those company going to get petty revenge by copyright strike everyone
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Yup that's the problem you can't even name songs now
1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
The main problem now is that because they ain't going to get profit from copyright claim, they will copyright strike your account, so a lot of YouTube channels will be banned for stupid reason, which will cause major controversies to Google Inc.
2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
yup, i hope that they notice something is wrong when they start banning channels for NAMING a song
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