LastSurvivor
join:2008-01-02 Toledo, OH
| Re: My question is.... said by EPS :Viacom wants to prove that infringing videos drive YouTube's popularity. Therefore they'd need information on both infringing and non-infringing video statistics, I'd think. I can understand that, but the data numbers can easily be skewed. Someone records their dog jumping over frogs on the street with music playing in background, music is a copyrighted song, will they count that as infringement?
Someone uploads a favorite scene of their favorite tv show, it's 2 mins. and 30 secs. long, will they count this as infringement?
Kids dancing goofy like in front of the camera to their favorite teen music star, course the music is copyrighted, will they count that? You get the picture....
So Viacom can easily say that only 10% of the stuff is non-infringing. How would we know? If this were the case, I think Google, in their best interest, should release that data (with the privacy data removed) so others can see, maybe to the EFF or someone.
I think there's more going on, but that's just a conspiracy theory Course all of this is just my opinion...  |