I noticed recently that a number of claims of copyright violation had been filed by supposed copyright owners against several of my YouTube videos that were clearly in the public domain. Performances of theremin transcriptions of Handel, Satie, and other long-dead composers had claims of violation of copyright ownership appended to them.
While this does not involve any threat to YouTube use or membership, it is a nuisance and it is fraudulent. If you click on the claim link, there is an option to challenge the claim so, out of curiosity, I decided to do just that. I wrote out the following form email statement contesting copyright claims, and sent the message to YouTube:
"Composer [fill in name of composer] died in the year [fill in year of death] so the work in question is indisputably in the public domain. The musical accompaniment and arrangement on this recording were written and performed by me in my own recording studio, and were not borrowed or "lifted" from anyone else's work. No individual or corporate entity has any legitimate claim for copyright protection in regard to either the audio or video portions of this performance."
Within seconds of sending these emails to YouTube, I received the following confirmation that the claim of copyright violation had been removed.
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One or more music publishing rights collecting societies has reviewed your dispute and released its copyright claim on your video, "XXXXXXXX". For more information, please visit your copyright notice page
Sincerely,
- The YouTube Team
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What is puzzling about this is that the response was instantaneous and no "publishing rights collecting society" could possibly have had time to receive and review my claim. YouTube's reply was clearly automated. Nevertheless, the copyright infringement warning was immediately removed.
Just to complicate things further, YouTube videos that clearly ARE copyright violations, such as the unauthorized recording of any published work by a composer who has not been dead at least 70 years, seem to pass unnoticed by publishers.
What's with these guys anyway??
jistaskin