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recent bookmarks from jmGoogle spent $60 million on building Content ID2018-09-13T10:12:35+00:00
https://www.theverge.com/2016/7/13/12165194/youtube-content-id-2-billion-paid
jmGoogle’s new report takes aim at this claim. It asserts that Content ID is a highly effective solution, with over 98 percent of copyright management on YouTube happening through Content ID, and just 2 percent coming from humans filing copyright removal notices. Google also says the music industry opts to monetize more than 95 percent of its copyright claims, meaning they leave the videos up on the service. It claims a whopping half of the music industry's YouTube revenue comes from fan content — covers, remixes, dance versions, etc. — claimed via Content ID. The report also puts a hard figure on how much Google has spent so far on Content ID: $60 million.
]]>filtering copyright eu article-13 copyfight content-id google web ugchttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:jm/b:d8ce4f90612d/How The Copyright Industry Pushed For Internet Surveillance | TorrentFreak2013-07-01T09:37:51+00:00
http://torrentfreak.com/how-the-copyright-industry-pushed-for-internet-surveillance-130630/
jmThe reason for the copyright industry to push for surveillance is simple: any digital communications channel can be used for private conversation, but it can also be used to share culture and knowledge that is under copyright monopoly. In order to tell which communications is which, you must sort all of it – and to do that, you must look at all of it. In other words, if enforcing the copyright monopoly is your priority, you need to kill privacy, and specifically anonymity and secrecy of correspondence.
This was exactly my biggest worry -- a side-effect of effective copyright filtering is the creation of infrastructure for online oppression by the state.]]>copyright privacy state data-protection rick-falkvinge copyfight internet filtering surveillance anonymityhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:jm/b:dc056a81c09b/