Copyright madness: YouTube seems to doubt whether Shakespeare is in the public domain.
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T [email protected] shared this topic
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Shake more beer, Willy!
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To DMCA takedown or to not DMCA takedown? That is the question.
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Not so much a Youtube issue as a modern copyright issue.
But I'm curious, is that recommendation meant for users or creators? And don't say "both", I know it's a chicken and egg thing, I'm asking what you think comes first.
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Whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer the sponsors and ads of free content, or take cards against premium content and by supporting skip them.
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Content has to arrive first for users to consume. It really is a "both" type of response to some extent.
In my opinion, the solution is for content creators to simultaneously release on alternative platforms while also maintaining a YouTube presence so they're still making money from that. However, they should start heavily advertising the alternative platforms on every video and transitioning to a different payment model (e.g. Patreon, Ko-fi, Indiegogo, etc). Content creators could organize with other creators and coordinating the transition. If you got huge channels like Digital Foundry, Linus Tech Tips, GamersNexus, etc (for the PC gaming scene, as an example) to agree, then that's already millions of users.
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It's mine. I own the Shakespeare copyright.
Pay up.
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Just gonna leave this Tom Scott video here because I think it is an interesting watch.
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Hmmmm bet Gemini is trained on lots of Shakespeare. Book em Danno!
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They have fuck all content. Fortunately both peertube and yt I regrate into pipepipe seemlessly so don't even need a second app.
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Agreed, and curious to see what โsolutionโ the OP comes up with.
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The naval battle flag of the knights Templar?
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โWeโll clear things up only after we hear from the original creator โ
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A good article on Walled Culture, marred by its being illustrated with AI slop. Surely a normal, real public domain Shakespeare image could have illustrated the point of the article just as well, if not better.
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Pericles, Prince of Tyre. Act IV, Scene 1
[Enter pirates]
First Pirate: Hold, villain!
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There's no consequences to filling out a false claim. That's been a problem with the DMCA that existed even before YouTube.