I'll explain further @TeamYouTube when I license music for film, I will only get paid a fraction of the royalties since I don't own all of the rights on the movie. I only worked on the music, so I get paid for that. Now let's say I make a YouTube video...
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I make the video myself, record my voice and there happens to be 3rd party bg music. Why does the owner of the 3rd party music get 100% of all the revenue? This is really not fair to creators and in fact, it could be considered a violation of the creators' copyright.
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I think we can agree that in this instance, the 3rd party only owns a fraction of the copyright, yet they get 100% of the revenue. I've been trying to get
@TeamYouTube to respond and give their thoughts on this, but the lack of a response is not helping.Show this thread -
Copyright needs a big overhaul on YT and in particular how revenue is split in case of a claim. I agree that blatantly sharing copyrighted work should not be monetizable, but when that is not the case, revenue should be split across all copyright holders, not just one.
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YouTube already specifies how much of my video is being claimed, in most cases it's about a few min of a 5 to 6 hour livestream, so why can't they convert that to a percentage of the revenue is beyond me.
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@TeamYouTube Your bio includes "answers from the team that brings you YouTube", why have you not responded to any of the 30+ tweets I've posted in the last few months asking for your thoughts on this subject? Looks more like "selective answers when we feel like it".Show this thread -
@h3h3productions I know you have been talking about both copyright and fair use, any thoughts on what I described in this thread? Also maybe any of you could chime in and share your view on this@adamneelybass@NerdCity@fairtube9000@ThisIsTheFatRat@iancorzine@PaulmdavidsShow this thread
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