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YouTube to update 'Content ID,' bringing hope to professional YouTubers

YouTube's automated "Content ID" system is meant to catch potential copyright violations, but it doesn't always work as advertised. Now, YouTube has plans to update Content ID in a way that could improve revenue flow to video creators when their work is stuck in a copyright dispute.

Existing automated copyright-checking system can sometimes unfairly shut down video creators

YouTube is reforming Content ID, a system that automatically flags potential copyright disputes. (Dado Ruvic/Reuters)

YouTube's automated Content IDsystem is meant to catch potential copyright violations almost as soon as they happen.

But as Canadian YouTube star Corey Vidal has learned, Content ID can cause financial and logistical difficulties for people who make YouTube videos for a living difficulties that may be eased by an upcoming change to how Content ID works.

In 2009, Vidal'spopularStarWars-themedacappellatributeto famed movie score composer John Williams was hit with a copyright violation claim after the Content ID system flagged it as violating a copyright held by Warner Music Group.

At the time, it was Vidal's third "strike" underYouTube'scopyright enforcement regime, and he had his YouTubechannel suspended.

"I look, and my entireYouTubechannel is gone," recalls Vidal. "Literally my entire life was taken away from me in the blink of an eye."

Vidal was able to resolve some of the previous disputes and revive his channel, but it took time to dispute the copyright claim on his video.He estimates that cost himthousands of dollars in potential advertising revenue.

Now, YouTube is promising to reform Content ID in a way that would allowvideo producersto potentially keep therevenue from disputed videos, by letting videoswith potential copyright violations continue earning money while thedispute is resolved. Some YouTube content creators say that's good news for their businesses.

How Content ID works, and how it's changing

YouTubelaunchedContent ID in 2007, within a year of the video service being purchased byGoogle.Even when it doesn't lead to the deletion of an entire account, the Content ID system can prevent advertising revenue from reaching video creators, if it determines that a video violates existing copyrights.

Certain copyright owners (often movie studios, music labelsand video game producers) can submit their copyrighted content to a YouTube database, which assigns each item a digital identifier based on its video and audio attributes. YouTube then scans new videos against that database to check for matches.

I thinkYouTubeis giving content creators a bit of the benefit of the doubt.- Michael Rizzi, YouTube video creator

If the Content ID system finds that a new video uses copyrighted material, it gives the copyright owner options like blocking the video, or even earning advertising revenue from it. If the video's creator disputes the copyright claim, though, YouTube currently suspends all revenue collection from the video until it can resolve the dispute. (YouTube says less than oneper cent of Content ID claims are disputed.)

Following an update to Content ID that YouTube says will take placein "the coming months,"YouTubewill continue collecting revenue from those disputedvideos, holding it in a kind of escrow and releasing it to the eventualwinner of the copyright dispute.
'Star Wars (John Williams Is The Man) acappella tribute medley song,' a video by professional YouTube video creator Corey Vidal, was subject to a copyright dispute claim. (CBC)

In a blog postYouTube says, "We've been listening closely to concerns about the loss of monetization during the Content ID dispute process" and acknowledgesthat losing advertisingrevenue can be"an especially frustrating experience for creators if that claim ends up being incorrect while a video racks up views in its first few days."

Vidal describesYouTube'snew plan as "genius" and "perfect."

"I understand the challenge of scale" that YouTube faces, says Vidal."I understand that Content ID is probably, for the most part, very accurate."

Content misidentification

Even though YouTube's Content IDsystem might be accurate most of the time, it's clear that there's still room to improve both Content IDand the way YouTube resolves copyright disputes.

British composer Simon Wilkinson writes and licenses ambient music for videos, many of which end up on YouTube.

"There's a huge amount of content creators like myself," says Wilkinson. "I thinkYouTubeare now realizing that there's a growing voice of people that are getting frustrated at the Content ID system."

Over the past six months, Wilkinson says Content ID has repeatedly misidentified one of his more popular tracks as copyrighted material owned by someone else, leading to copyright disputes for video producers who paid to use his music. Wilkinson says the two songs sound nothing alike.

"It makes me look kind of shady, like maybe I've sampled a band or that I'm selling music that isn't mine," says Wilkinson.

Wilkinson says he can't get in touch with anyone at YouTube who can help him resolve the problemand suspects he's losing business because of his clients' copyright disputes.
YouTube's Content ID system flags potential copyright violations. YouTube says fewer than one per cent of those claims are disputed. (Dado Ruvic/Reuters)

Shane Luis, who produces video game-themedvideos for the popular YouTube channel Rerez,recentlyfaceda copyright disputefrom video game company Konami. He chose to remove the video in question entirely rather than dispute Konami's claim, for fear of earning a strike that would threaten his YouTube account even though he believed he was using Konami's material legally.

Although Luis says he's learned about relevant copyright law, hethinks many YouTube video creators are entirely unaware of how copyright works, which exacerbates the problem. He'dlike to see better communication on YouTube's part regarding what is and isn't legal.

"The conversation has been kind of blank," says Luis. "Nobody really knows what they're allowed to do."

Michael Rizzi, who runs an LGBT-themedYouTubechannel, sees YouTube's move to update Content ID as an acknowledgement of the complexity of copyright law.

"I think YouTube is giving content creators a bit of the benefit of the doubt, knowing that these could be 16- to 24-year-olds, or maybe even older, who just have no idea that what they're doing isn't allowed," says Rizzi.