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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. Our Channel Could Be Deleted - Gamers Nexus

Our Channel Could Be Deleted - Gamers Nexus

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved PC Gaming
pcgaming
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  • D DebatableRaccoon

    No I’m not, nor is that what I said.

    So we’ve got to that part of the discussion, have we? The part where the pieces line up too much for comfort so you deny what you were saying. Cool.

    Continuing to contribute to a monopoly isn’t smart either.

    This is something I actually agree with but short of a mass exodus of big creators, I see it being too small to matter, only serving to cripple the creators who jump ship.

    UlrichU This user is from outside of this forum
    UlrichU This user is from outside of this forum
    Ulrich
    wrote on last edited by
    #44

    We’ve gotten to the part of the conversation where you run out of legitimate arguments and resort to strawmanning.

    D 1 Reply Last reply
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    • M mystikincarnate@lemmy.ca

      I don’t usually watch gamers Nexus stuff, I find it to be a bit dense for casual watching. It’s accurate as all hell, as far as I’m concerned… They know their shit and they research the crap out of whatever they’re covering; this both makes them awesome, but adds to the density of their content.

      I also have immense respect for them because they’ll call shit out like this, and just give the finger to any possible repercussions. They’re legally in the clear as far as I’m concerned, they’re hyper careful about that kind of thing. But that doesn’t mean that Google is willing to host them while they do shit that makes Google’s advertising partners grumpy; and I assume Bloomberg, or a company affiliated with Bloomberg runs ads on YouTube/Google/whatever.

      They’re in a position where they have significant risk, and instead of tucking tail and doing what they’re told, they’re fighting, and pointing out the problem. They’re putting a spotlight on the fact that we all know, but nobody really mentions, that “good business” in the ad space, is to appease your advertisers as much as possible. Like it or not, Google is still, very much, an ad company. That’s how they started, that’s still a big part of the business. It’s why Google search is free. It’s why Gmail is free, and it’s why YouTube is free (almost all of these have paid options, but that’s not the focus right now).

      So like it or not, Google’s in a pretty tough spot. I’m sure the views from GN drive some significant ad revenue, at the same time, in certain that the contracts for ads from Bloomberg and affiliates, are worth quite a bit as well. If they kick GN, then they lose ad revenue from any ads that would run on their videos in there future. If they don’t, they risk losing a potentially very valuable advertiser.

      They’re stuck in the middle. I have no idea what they’re going to decide here.

      I won’t blame Google either way. I’d like to see them standing up for GN, but I can see why they wouldn’t. They’ll have a stronger arm against GN than they would against Bloomberg, because, let’s face it, Bloomberg has more money to throw at lawyers and making legal issues for Google, than GN does.

      I do, however, entirely blame Bloomberg in all of this. I’m certain that GN is using any footage insert fair use laws with proper attribution to the original source (though, I haven’t seen this video yet, nor the one in question. I just know GN well enough to know that the likelihood that they didn’t, is basically zero).

      GN already has my trust for their integrity. I can’t say the same for Google, YouTube, and certainly not Bloomberg… Ha.

      I will, of course, be looking more deeply into this later, and I will amend my viewpoint as information is uncovered. Until then, good luck GN. You guys are heros and legends. Never stop being exactly who you are.

      F This user is from outside of this forum
      F This user is from outside of this forum
      frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone
      wrote on last edited by
      #45

      I think you’re being too forgiving to Google, and also pointing at the wrong problem.

      The central problem isn’t ad space, but the DMCA. It requires companies that host content the way YouTube does to have policies for DMCA takedown requests. Generally, this means removing content when they receive a request. The DMCA makes a form of compromise here, where hosting companies won’t be liable as long as they show they’re processing takedown requests in good faith.

      This is exactly the same law in the US that comes into effect when your ISP gets a takedown notice. Your ISP isn’t liable as long as they pass that on to you and tell you to delete what you “stole”, etc.

      The problem is partially Google’s implementation and partially the DMCA itself. To the best of my knowledge, the three strikes system isn’t something in the DMCA. That’s YouTube’s policy alone. ISPs generally don’t operate on a three strikes system–they might choose to, but they don’t have to.

      The DMCA itself doesn’t have any kind of mechanism for pushing back against companies that send takedown notices abusively. This means companies setup an automated system that scans uploaded videos looking for anything they can claim is theirs and send a notice. That’s probably what Bloomberg did. These systems aren’t smart enough to distinguish fair use from not; they have zero incentive to even try something as simple as “a five second clip of our stuff in a 3 hour video is probably fair use”. The entire burden is placed on content creators to show they aren’t infringing.

      Until the law is changed to deal with notices sent in bad faith, this sort of thing will continue. Naturally, companies like Disney and BMG yell bloody murder any time they even get a hint of Congress trying to do that.

      All this is separate from YouTube’s own content ID automated system. That’s a whole different set of problems from the DMCA.

      M 1 Reply Last reply
      7
      • I inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world

        Hyperbolic title to be sure but I think it’s justified to point out Fuck Bloomberg.

        N This user is from outside of this forum
        N This user is from outside of this forum
        nukeforyou@lemmy.zip
        wrote on last edited by
        #46

        https://archive.org/details/the-nvidia-ai-gpu-black-market-investigating-smuggling-corruption-governments

        1 Reply Last reply
        4
        • I inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world

          Hyperbolic title to be sure but I think it’s justified to point out Fuck Bloomberg.

          T This user is from outside of this forum
          T This user is from outside of this forum
          theobvioussolution@lemmy.ca
          wrote on last edited by
          #47

          I don’t see as much potential malice in Bloomberg as the conspiracy theories are saying, just normal every day malice of their legal department seeing their footage being used and suing to get money out of it. The news industry is particularly cutthroat now, so paying top buck for video exclusives probably makes them think they can demand cuts from channels like Steve’s. If it was pressure due to any one of the conspiracies being brought up, the opposition would be much more organized and not just coming from the legal department, and they wouldn’t be giving him an out by just saying he can pay a licensing fee to resolve the dispute.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • D dukemirage@lemmy.world

            Was it really neccessary to fly there?

            ProdigalFrogP This user is from outside of this forum
            ProdigalFrogP This user is from outside of this forum
            ProdigalFrog
            wrote on last edited by prodigalfrog@slrpnk.net
            #48

            There are very few dedicated passenger liners left in the world that aren’t luxury travel cruises. The only one I’m aware of that has a US route only goes across the atlantic from NY to the UK.

            The only sea based options to get to China from the US would be to try to get passage on a cargo ship going the same way, or charter a small vessel for the voyage, which would likely cost thousands.

            It would be nice to tax plane travel heavily, and then subsidize sail travel to make that more viable, along with mandatory consecutive monthly vacation time for all jobs, like the EU has.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • F frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone

              I think you’re being too forgiving to Google, and also pointing at the wrong problem.

              The central problem isn’t ad space, but the DMCA. It requires companies that host content the way YouTube does to have policies for DMCA takedown requests. Generally, this means removing content when they receive a request. The DMCA makes a form of compromise here, where hosting companies won’t be liable as long as they show they’re processing takedown requests in good faith.

              This is exactly the same law in the US that comes into effect when your ISP gets a takedown notice. Your ISP isn’t liable as long as they pass that on to you and tell you to delete what you “stole”, etc.

              The problem is partially Google’s implementation and partially the DMCA itself. To the best of my knowledge, the three strikes system isn’t something in the DMCA. That’s YouTube’s policy alone. ISPs generally don’t operate on a three strikes system–they might choose to, but they don’t have to.

              The DMCA itself doesn’t have any kind of mechanism for pushing back against companies that send takedown notices abusively. This means companies setup an automated system that scans uploaded videos looking for anything they can claim is theirs and send a notice. That’s probably what Bloomberg did. These systems aren’t smart enough to distinguish fair use from not; they have zero incentive to even try something as simple as “a five second clip of our stuff in a 3 hour video is probably fair use”. The entire burden is placed on content creators to show they aren’t infringing.

              Until the law is changed to deal with notices sent in bad faith, this sort of thing will continue. Naturally, companies like Disney and BMG yell bloody murder any time they even get a hint of Congress trying to do that.

              All this is separate from YouTube’s own content ID automated system. That’s a whole different set of problems from the DMCA.

              M This user is from outside of this forum
              M This user is from outside of this forum
              mystikincarnate@lemmy.ca
              wrote on last edited by
              #49

              I understand what you’re saying here. I would reiterate “fair use”.

              I know, DMCA take downs can happen for a lot less than what’s covered under fair use, especially with YouTube/Google’s system of handling take down requests. Err on the side of the copyright holder, until proven otherwise.

              I still have a lot to look into on this so I can’t say how relevant your point or mine is in the context of GN. But you certainly do make good points.

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              • UlrichU Ulrich

                We’ve gotten to the part of the conversation where you run out of legitimate arguments and resort to strawmanning.

                D This user is from outside of this forum
                D This user is from outside of this forum
                DebatableRaccoon
                wrote on last edited by
                #50

                Have a good day, you sad fuck. I’m done with your ignorance.

                UlrichU 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • D DebatableRaccoon

                  Have a good day, you sad fuck. I’m done with your ignorance.

                  UlrichU This user is from outside of this forum
                  UlrichU This user is from outside of this forum
                  Ulrich
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #51

                  Username does not check out

                  D 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • UlrichU Ulrich

                    Username does not check out

                    D This user is from outside of this forum
                    D This user is from outside of this forum
                    DebatableRaccoon
                    wrote on last edited by debatableraccoon@lemmy.ca
                    #52

                    That’s not what my name refers to but even then, there’s nothing left to debate. You’ve already decided you’re right based entirely on “He’s got an audience”, completely ignoring the fact that a large chunk of them won’t jump to another platform for just one creator which would harm Steve’s viewship and thus his bottom line. You say I’m only stating the obvious, don’t have any legitimate reasoning and am resorting to strawmanning despite giving absolutely nothing to show Peertube is a viable solution. You ended the debate all on your own by being obtuse, likely willfully misunderstanding basic language and deflecting so I’m done wasting my time.

                    UlrichU 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • D DebatableRaccoon

                      That’s not what my name refers to but even then, there’s nothing left to debate. You’ve already decided you’re right based entirely on “He’s got an audience”, completely ignoring the fact that a large chunk of them won’t jump to another platform for just one creator which would harm Steve’s viewship and thus his bottom line. You say I’m only stating the obvious, don’t have any legitimate reasoning and am resorting to strawmanning despite giving absolutely nothing to show Peertube is a viable solution. You ended the debate all on your own by being obtuse, likely willfully misunderstanding basic language and deflecting so I’m done wasting my time.

                      UlrichU This user is from outside of this forum
                      UlrichU This user is from outside of this forum
                      Ulrich
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #53

                      completely ignoring the fact that a large chunk of them won’t jump to another platform

                      I didn’t ignore anything. I agreed with that above. I don’t know why you’re wasting your time trying to gaslight people on a miniscule forum into believing I said something that they can all see for themselves that I did not say.

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