`` Movie explaining copyright infringement '' on YouTube receives a claim of copyright infringement



As the `` movie that the experts commented on the copyright '' posted on YouTube received a petition for copyright infringement, the New York University (NYU) Law School who posted the movie asked about the issue of copyright infringement on YouTube Is reported.

How Explaining Copyright Broke the YouTube Copyright System | NYU School of Law

https://www.law.nyu.edu/centers/engelberg/news/2020-03-04-youtube-takedown

The movie allegedly infringed was filmed at a symposium on intellectual property held at the Engelberg Center in the United States in 2019. Judith Finel, a musicologist, and Sandy Wilber, a forensic musicologist, presented and discussed `` a proof of similarity in copyright and music '', led by jurist Joseph Fishman, a jurist. It is a movie of when.

The following movie has the same content as the movie in question, and the music was used from 16 minutes 57 seconds. Part of Marvin Gaye 's ' GOT TO GIVE IT UP ' is used.

Proving Similarity-YouTube


The main purpose of the symposium was to explain how to analyze music in terms of copyright litigation. At the beginning of the panel discussion, when we gave a presentation on 'What approaches are we taking to analyze music', only a portion of the song was played to give an example.

In June 2019, a movie recording the symposium was posted on the NYU Law School channel on YouTube. In August of the same year, a movie with only the slides of the presentation modified was posted. The songs used in both presentations were the same, but only the movie posted in August received copyright infringement claims from multiple companies via YouTube's Content ID system.

The email below is the email that YouTube sent to NYU Law School when the Universal Music Group filed a copyright infringement claim.



NYU Law School has filed a copyright infringement opposition against YouTube, claiming that the content of the movie does not constitute copyright infringement. In the end, YouTube did not give a clear explanation of why you received the copyright infringement complaint, but a few weeks after the appeal, you were informed that the movie complaint was deleted.

According to the NYU Law School, the symposium where the movie was filmed included audience members with deep copyright interests, including the world's top intellectual property scholars and those who have operated large online platforms. It was gathered. However, even if it is a movie explaining copyright infringement done at a place where many experts gather, the NYU law school has been subject to a copyright infringement claim on YouTube, so the NYU law school is YouTube's automated content It points out the incompleteness of the confirmation function.

'The system for determining copyright infringement based solely on existing work is incomplete and should incorporate a process to address exceptions. It requires a fair and impartial human review, 'says NYU Law School.

in Web Service,   Video, Posted by darkhorse_log