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| Beware of Google bearing copyright tips | | Print | |
| Written by Noric Dilanchian | ||||||
| Wednesday, 17 October 2007 | ||||||
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It is also another step towards protecting content owners whose copyright work is uploaded into YouTube without permission and then copied over, in virus-like fashion, to innumerable other sites. It's a massive problem for audio-visual content owners. For many of them YouTube is a punk, not a new kid on the block.
YouTube Video Identification has been developed internally after looking outside algorithm fortress Google. As for audio copyright works (largely music), in February 2007 Google licensed copyright filtering technology for YouTube from AudibleMagic.
Google's announcement emphasises that its latest attempted technology fix is part of a package of protections.
Before assessing Google's move, here's the 15 October 2007 Google announcement in part (emphasis ours):
This Google copyright compliance package therefore includes legal and policy restrictions on users, a continuing 10 minute limit on the length of videos, takedown software tools provided to copyright holders, and copyright tips.
However, beware of Google bearing copyright tips. Google is famous for pushing copyright law beyond traditional limits. Conveniently for Google, its copyright tips only reference United States copyright law.
The release of YouTube Video Identification is another indication of Google being forced to move YouTube closer to traditional copyright industries in various entertainment and information sectors. Conventions, practices and expectations in those sectors have been
Google remains arguably the leading force worldwide in re-framing what is lawful under copyright law today.
UPDATE: In a move which excluded Google, Disney, Microsoft Lead Copyright Pact (Wall Street Journal, 18 Oct 2007): "The copyright holders in the group have agreed not to pursue Internet companies for infringement claims if their sites adhere to certain principles. Those principles include eliminating copyright-infringing content uploaded by users to Web sites, and blocking any infringing material before it is publicly accessible."
Let's talk about your intellectual property, commercialisation and business law needs. Call Noric Dilanchian of Dilanchian Lawyers & Consultants: Tel (+61 2) 9269 0229. After hours send an email or better still an Enquiry Form. We'll reply with a costed proposal. FAQ | What we do | Testimonials
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Google (the owner of YouTube) has just announced the release of a beta version of a
against copyright infringement in YouTube. Reported cases include: (1) Viacom's in the US, (2) English soccer's
molded since about the mid-19th century and in some cases even earlier. Google is playing legal chess. Lightbulb has tracked key 2007 moves:
