Numerous video game-related YouTube personalities have spent the last day digging through piles of copyright claims suddenly filling their inboxes, claims that they say are messing with their ability to produce and profit from videos they post online.
YouTuber Brad Colburn, whose TheRadBrad channel has some 1,943,317 subscribers, told Kotaku that heās been getting copyright notices for at least 24 hours. These claims potentially block him from earning advertising money for the hours upon hours of footage of games he posts online.
Some game publishers have been OK with people streaming and sharing their content. Others havenāt been. But copyright claims tend to come and go. They donāt usually hit in huge waves like this. Brad explained what heās been going through:
https://lastchance.cc/nintendo-forcing-ads-on-some-youtube-lets-play-video-507092383%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Colburn has said that the volume of claims heās getting could ācrippleā his channel. Heās not alone there.
āBasically every game reviewer and Letās Player on YouTube is getting reamed with copyright matches right now,ā YouTuber Zach Scott told me. āIāve had over 30 videos be pegged, mostly for music included in the game.ā ScottāsZackScottGames channel has nearly half a million subscribers on YouTube.
YouTube has used programs to crawl videos and sniff out copyrighted material before, but this weekās sweep seems unusually aggressive and less specific.
āIt seems to be the same ContentID system, except all of my matches seem heavily focused on audio and music,ā he said. āWhen Nintendo claimed my videos before, they seemed deliberate with no references to the claimed content. Now it is all automated, and itās affected about 2% of my uploads. Some are matched from songs Nintendo has cataloged themselves, whereas most are from 3rd party music licensing companies like Ingrooves, WMG, Loud Digital Network, etc. For example, most of my old Sim City videos have been claimed due to having music from an EA soundtrack. Some of my GTA V videos have been claimed for various music that plays in the background. This is weird because other than Nintendo, this is not the game publishers going after video creators. These are all music publishers and license holders having their catalog of work detected in Letās Plays by YouTubeās ContentID system. Even some of my videos featuring royalty free music that Iāve bought and licensed myself have been claimed.ā
Scott shared this example, which shows one of his GTA V videos getting snagged because of a song played on one of the gameās in-game radio stations:
Weāve reached out to YouTube to see whatās going on with this. They havenāt replied yet, but when they do, weāll let you know.
It seems, at least, that this is catching just about everyone off guard.
Game publisher Capcom, for example, whose Dead Rising 3 was featured in a Colburn video that was just flagged, posted the following to Twitter:
YouTubers: Pls let us know if you've had videos flagged today. These may be illegitimate flags not instigated by us. We are investigating.
ā Capcom USA (@CapcomUSA_) December 10, 2013
It also seems that major YouTube video game networks like Machinima had no idea this was coming:
https://twitter.com/embed/status/410195626442244096
Escapist reviews editor Jim Sterling has posted his own erudite takeon whatās going on and shared some ridiculous examples of his own videos being flagged this week. He pins more of this on the game publishers, so his experience may be a little different if no less eyebrow-raising.
YouTube videos of games are not withoutcontroversy. Some game publishers see Letās Play videos and other videos that show a lot of gameplay as some form of copyright infringement or at least as something that they should be the ones earning money fromāas opposed to the people recording the videos. Others see the very same videos as some of the best free advertising a game can get. That controversy will only intensify as these kinds of intentional or accidental crackdowns occur, regardless of who theyāre from.
To contact the author of this post, write to [emailĀ protected] or find him on Twitter @stephentotilo.