Author Topic: YouTube & Copyright  (Read 1249 times)

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JL

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YouTube & Copyright
« on: August 07, 2013, 04:53:58 PM »
Kinda desperate for experiences on this.

I'm currently editing a video of which the main song is not blocked in any country.
However, i'm working on the outro and the song is gonna be different and want to do anything neccessary to have the video remain unblocked.

Shit i've heard about is this:

-> delete song info from the audio file (doesnt make sense, due to content-ID)
-> slightly change the pitch of the music so content-ID wont fetch it (apparently doesnt work anymore)
-> have the song play for 30 seconds or less. (dunno if this works)

What are you experiences?
If you have any tricks going on there, i'd really appreciate if you'd share them


cheers

Offline Determined

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Re: YouTube & Copyright
« Reply #1 on: August 07, 2013, 04:56:49 PM »
Changing the pitch works best, just modulate it to a semi-pitch up or down & you're good, deleting the info doesn't do shit & I'm pretty sure they can't legally do anything if it's shorter than 30 seconds, that however, might not stop YT as it is run by Google & Google is pure evil.

There are some Floyd songs with changed pitch on YT that have no copyright shit on them, so I think it still works.

JL

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Re: YouTube & Copyright
« Reply #2 on: August 08, 2013, 06:37:23 AM »
how reliable do you consider the change of pitch?

Offline Sava

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Re: YouTube & Copyright
« Reply #3 on: August 08, 2013, 10:43:21 AM »
Just try it out with a new Youtube account.

Offline XTO --

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Re: YouTube & Copyright
« Reply #4 on: August 09, 2013, 08:11:59 PM »
how reliable do you consider the change of pitch?


100% reliable. Google verifies copyrighted stuff by checking the waveforms. As soons as you change the pitch, you are making the waves completely different, therefore, a "different" music than the one in Google's DB

JL

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Re: YouTube & Copyright
« Reply #5 on: August 10, 2013, 08:27:43 AM »
how reliable do you consider the change of pitch?


100% reliable. Google verifies copyrighted stuff by checking the waveforms. As soons as you change the pitch, you are making the waves completely different, therefore, a "different" music than the one in Google's DB

i forgot something for sure  :lol:

reduced the pitch of the song by a semitone, uploaded the song without any info to youtube. it didn't even take youtube a minute to recognize it - although it would tell me the song started at 0:15 of the video.

 

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