What is Copyright?
When
a person creates an original work that is fixed in a physical medium,
he or she automatically owns copyright to the work. The owner has the
exclusive right to use the work in certain, specific ways.
-
Audiovisual works, such as TV shows, movies, and online videos
-
Sound recordings and musical compositions
-
Written works, such as lectures, articles, books, and musical compositions
-
Visual works, such as paintings, posters, and advertisements
-
Video games and computer software
-
Dramatic works, such as plays and musicals
In some circumstances, it is possible to use a copyright-protected
work without infringing the owner’s copyright. For more about this, you
may want to learn about fair use.
Learn more about how to get permission to use someone else's content in your video.
Your video can still be claimed by a copyright owner, even if you have...
-
Given credit to the copyright owner
-
Refrained from monetizing the infringing video
-
Noticed similar videos that appear on YouTube
-
Purchased the content on iTunes, a CD, or DVD
-
Recorded the content yourself from TV, a movie theater, or the radio
-
Stated that “no copyright infringement is intended"
Learn more about how to get permission to use someone else's content in your video.
No. YouTube isn’t able to mediate rights ownership disputes. When we receive a complete takedown notice, we remove the content as the law requires. When we receive a valid counter notification
we forward it to the person who requested the removal. After this, it’s
up to the parties involved to resolve the issue in court.
Copyright is just one form of intellectual property. It's not the
same as trademark, which protects brand names, mottos, logos, and other
source identifiers from being used by others for certain purposes. It is
also different from patent law, which protects inventions.
YouTube offers a separate removal process for videos which violate trademark, trade secret, or other laws.
YouTube offers a separate removal process for videos which violate trademark, trade secret, or other laws.
Just because you appear in a video, image, or audio recording does
not mean you own the copyright to it. For example, if your friend filmed
a conversation between the two of you, she would own the copyright to
that video recording. The words the two of you are speaking are not
subject to copyright separately from the video itself, unless they were
fixed in advance.
If your friend, or someone else, uploaded a video, image, or recording of you without your permission, and you feel it violates your privacy or safety, you may wish to file a privacy complaint.
If your friend, or someone else, uploaded a video, image, or recording of you without your permission, and you feel it violates your privacy or safety, you may wish to file a privacy complaint.
No comments:
Post a Comment