The future is here today: you can't play Bach on Youtube because Sony says they own his compositions

Authored by boingboing.net and submitted by RolandRhyce

The future is here today: you can't play Bach on Youtube because Sony says they own his compositions

James Rhodes, a pianist, performed a Bach composition for his Youtube channel, but it didn't stay up -- Youtube's Content ID system pulled it down and accused him of copyright infringement because Sony Music Global had claimed that they owned 47 seconds' worth of his personal performance of a song whose composer has been dead for 300 years.

This is a glimpse of the near future. In one week, the European Parliament will vote on a proposal to force all online services to implement Content ID-style censorship, but not just for videos -- for audio, text, stills, code, everything.

Just last week, German music professor Ulrich Kaiser posted his research on automated censorship of classical music, in which he found that it was nearly impossible to post anything by composers like Bartok, Schubert, Puccini and Wagner, because companies large and small have fraudulently laid claim to their whole catalogs.

Europeans have one week to contact their MEPs to head off this catastrophe.

Stop what you're doing and contact two friends in the EU right now and send them to Save Your Internet -- before it's too late.

Nevermind04 on September 6th, 2018 at 18:23 UTC »

Fraudulent DMCA claims by Sony were the primary reason I shut down my YouTube channel.

I wrote and performed only my original songs. I did not use any sort of backing tracks or do any cover songs. My channel rocked along in obscurity for years until one day one of my songs was posted on reddit. Suddenly I had a popular song and it was almost immediately fraudulently taken down by Sony.

I went through the very lengthy process to contest the takedown and the strike and was successful. During this time, I had posted a few new songs and they all had done very well. My subscriber numbers had been climbing due to reddit exposure.

Then I posted a brand new song for 100k subscribers. It was immediately taken down fraudulently by Sony. This time the appeals process was harder. It lasted way longer because YouTube repeatedly claimed that I was a "repeat violator", despite me correcting this false statement every time it was said by an agent.

During this appeals process, I posted two new songs and both were fraudulently taken down by Sony again. My channel was suspended. At that point, i just got tired of fighting and deleted the channel.

One of my fans contacted me later because she had noticed that all four of my videos that were taken down were trending at the same time an artist produced by Sony released something on YouTube. She thinks that Sony was using DMCA to reduce competition among trending videos.

Fuck Sony and fuck YouTube.

evanstravers on September 6th, 2018 at 15:21 UTC »

Fuck Sony

Gingerchaun on September 6th, 2018 at 14:31 UTC »

Im thinking i should copyright fire.