marshallkarp
Contributor
http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/target__youtube_regionalnews_tim_arango.htm
You know, I have always wondered about this - how youtube, video.google, and the rest were getting away with enabling breaking copyright laws. I have looked at quite a few on line videos and dive videos and there are Pirates of the Caribbean movie background music, commercially produced new age and love song music, television theme music, and so on. Not to mention, movie and television clips.
Copyright laws are easy, if you don't own the rights to to a song, video, or film, you have to get permission to show it. If you don't or can't get permission and put it out there on the web, you could be opening up yourself to a lawsuit.
When I started posting videos to Google video, they had people screening the videos for copyright infringement. I guess so many people were posting that they backed off to that if someone complains, they will take the video down.
My first video, I thought some commercially produced music (Vangelis) would be perfect for my video and contacted EMI Music Publishing for permission to use it. They sent me a one word email, "NO". So that was that.
Now the video and pictures you shoot are yours and you can do what you want with them (though you may have to get people or location releases). But, if you don't produce the music, well, you just need to hope that the producer or title holder doesn't come after you.
I know it is stifling creativity, but it is what it is.
You know, I have always wondered about this - how youtube, video.google, and the rest were getting away with enabling breaking copyright laws. I have looked at quite a few on line videos and dive videos and there are Pirates of the Caribbean movie background music, commercially produced new age and love song music, television theme music, and so on. Not to mention, movie and television clips.
Copyright laws are easy, if you don't own the rights to to a song, video, or film, you have to get permission to show it. If you don't or can't get permission and put it out there on the web, you could be opening up yourself to a lawsuit.
When I started posting videos to Google video, they had people screening the videos for copyright infringement. I guess so many people were posting that they backed off to that if someone complains, they will take the video down.
My first video, I thought some commercially produced music (Vangelis) would be perfect for my video and contacted EMI Music Publishing for permission to use it. They sent me a one word email, "NO". So that was that.
Now the video and pictures you shoot are yours and you can do what you want with them (though you may have to get people or location releases). But, if you don't produce the music, well, you just need to hope that the producer or title holder doesn't come after you.
I know it is stifling creativity, but it is what it is.