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In early September, San Mateo, Calif.-based, YouTube -- our favorite resource for watching videos of just about anything, and the publisher of 60 percent of all videos watched online -- signed an agreement with entertainment industry giant Warner Bros. Entertainment to make all of Warner's video content available for free on YouTube. In what seems like the biggest industry nod so far to the creativity of everyday users, Warner is apparently inviting viewers to remix its video and audio material, without approval ahead of time, as copyright law usually demands.
The move of a giant like Warner may be a signal that big copyright owners are finally trying to work with the reality of massive creativity in the hands of ordinary people, and the reality of most people -- whether remixers or not -- valuing broad access to creative works.
But Warner is only willing to work with those realities in order to make money. What we need to be asking, then, is, how are they going to do that, and what does that mean for our rights?
The basics are that YouTube and Warner are betting on advertising to make money for them. Much like Google makes content available for free while making money off the ads you watch while you are searching, YouTube is selling its access to viewers' eyes. In this case, Warner is freeing up the content itself in the hopes that it can make money from the ads that appear along with the content.
How will Warner's content be tracked so that they know how to allocate the profits? YouTube is developing technology that can identify Warner's material "by comparing audio patterns." Whether that material is in its original state or present in compilations or remixes made by others, the technology will track how much of the material is posted on YouTube.
YouTube's press release on the subject adds some more details:
"By the end of the year, professional content creators, including record labels, TV networks and movie studios, will have the opportunity to authorize the use of their content within the YouTube community by taking advantage of YouTube's new content identification and royalty reporting system [including]: … The opportunity to authorize and monetize the use of their works within the user-generated content on the site. … "What can we learn from this?
See more stories tagged with: media
Larisa Mann writes about technology, media and law for WireTap, studies jurisprudence and social policy at U.C. Berkeley and DJs under the name Ripley. She collaborates with the Riddim Method blog-dj-academic crew, Havocsound sound system, and various other cross-fertilizing organisms in the Bay Area and worldwide.
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