YouTube revamps its copyright claim system for creators

Those in the business of hosting videos created by the public need to have solid copyright protection and claim system in place. While YouTube’s is far from perfect — in fact, it’s been abused and used to extort creators — the company has rolled out changes to the system that makes it easier to deal with infringement claims. To start with, people manually filing copyright infringement claims must now provide timestamps for the exact part of the videos they’re reporting.

To prevent unscrupulous individuals from abusing the system, YouTube says it will revoke a user’s access to manual claims if they repeatedly fail to provide accurate manual timestamps. YouTube scans video uploads against a database of files, so its content ID technology can find visual and audio matches. Any possible copyright infringement instances found during that process leads to automated content ID claims — a “manual claim” is what YouTube calls complaints wherein the copyright owners themselves report the unauthorized use of their property.

The manual claim’s recipient will see the timestamp indicated by the reporting party, making it much easier to figure out which part of the video to edit. If they do choose to alter their video instead of disputing the claim, they can use YouTube’s updated editing tools to address the issue. Creators can now easily mute all sounds for the time-stamped segment or swap out the music with one of the platform’s free-to-use songs from its Audio Library.

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