Legal and Copyrights
Absolutely nothing. Actually you’d be making revenue every month and we’ll take a percentage of that depending on which Creator model you choose.
YouTube content ID creates a fingerprint of your content. The Network automatically matches content across the globe enabling creators to track/claim/take down in a scalable and automated manner.
Copyright strikes can arise for several reasons. If you uploaded content that another publisher owns (such as a video clip or a song clip) without the publisher’s permission, they have the right to request that YouTube remove it.
Any video that contains copyrighted material can be claimed or removed by the copyright owner. If your videos contain content that isn’t yours, it’s best if you remove it before action is taken against it. If a video has already received a copyright strike, removing the video will not remove the strike.
If you find that someone else has stolen one of your videos and uploaded it to YouTube, you can now submit a claim to DRM. We’ll deal with it directly and win you the stolen revenue you deserve. Just provide us the following information via [email protected]
- Link to your original video: What’s the URL for your 100% original video?
- Link to the stolen copy: What’s the URL of the stolen copy of your content?
- Timecode: When (in terms of hours:minutes:seconds) does your content appear in the stolen video? (If it’s the entire video, enter 00:00:00.)
- Policy: What action do you want DRM to take on the stolen content? (In most cases, you’ll want to monetize so you can grow your earnings.)
- Monetize: Earn money from any views the stolen video gets.
- Track: Keep track of all views of the stolen video within your YouTube analytics.
- Block: Keep the stolen video from being viewable on YouTube.
- Strike: Report the stolen video (and the uploader) to YouTube.
Creator owns the content while DRM retains the exclusive right to distribute the content across all digital platforms.