Monday, August 20, 2012

LAW-TED Talks-Margaret Gould Stewart: How YouTube thinks about copyright

The following information is used for educational purposes only.


Transcript:

So, if you're in the audience today,or maybe you're watching this talk in some other time or place,you are a participant in the digital rights ecosystem.Whether you're an artist, a technologist,a lawyer or a fan,the handling of copyright directly impacts your life.Rights management is no longersimply a question of ownership,it's a complex web of relationshipsand a critical part of our cultural landscape.YouTube cares deeply about the rights of content owners,but in order to give them choices about what they can dowith copies, mashups and more,we need to first identifywhen copyrighted material is uploaded to our site.

Let's look at a specific video so you can see how it works.Two years ago, recording artist Chris Brownreleased the official video of his single "Forever."A fan saw it on TV,recorded it with her camera phone,and uploaded it to YouTube.Because Sony Music had registered Chris Brown's videoin our Content ID system,within seconds of attempting to upload the video,the copy was detected,giving Sony the choice of what to do next.

But how do we know that the user's video was a copy?Well, it starts with content ownersdelivering assets into our database,along with a usage policythat tells us what to do when we find a match.We compare each uploadagainst all of the reference files in our database.This heat map is going to show youhow the brain of the system works.Here we can see the original reference filebeing compared to the user generated content.The system compares every momentof one to the other to see if there's a match.This means that we can identify a matcheven if the copy used is just a portion of the original file,plays it in slow motionand has degraded audio and video quality.And we do this every timethat a video is uploaded to YouTube.And that's over 20 hours of video every minute.When we find a match,we apply the policy that the rights owner has set down.

And the scale and the speed of this systemis truly breathtaking.We're not just talking about a few videos,we're talking about over100 years of video every day,between new uploads and the legacy scanswe regularly do across all of the content on the site.When we compare those hundred years of video,we're comparing it against millionsof reference files in our database.It would be like 36,000 peoplestaring at 36,000 monitorseach and every day, without so much as a coffee break.

Now, what do we do when we find a match?Well, most rights owners, instead of blocking,will allow the copy to be published.And then they benefit through the exposure,advertising and linked sales.Remember Chris Brown's video "Forever"?Well, it had its day in the sun and then it dropped off the charts,and that looked like the end of the story,but sometime last year, a young couple got married.This is their wedding video.You may have seen it.

(Music)

What's amazing about this is,if the processional of the wedding was this much fun,can you imagine how much fun the reception must have been?I mean, who are these people?I totally want to go to that wedding.

So their little wedding video went onto get over 40 million views.And instead of Sony blocking,they allowed the upload to occur.And they put advertising against itand linked from it to iTunes.And the song, 18 months old,went back to number four on the iTunes charts.So Sony is generating revenue from both of these.And Jill and Kevin, the happy couple,they came back from their honeymoonand found that their video had gone crazy viral.And they've ended up on a bunch of talk shows,and they've used it as an opportunity to make a difference.The video's inspired over 26,000 dollars in donationsto end domestic violence.The "JK Wedding [Entrance] Dance" became so popularthat NBC parodied it on the season finale of "The Office,"which just goes to show,it's truly an ecosystem of culture.Because it's not just amateurs borrowing from big studios,but sometimes big studios borrowing back.

By empowering choice, we can create a culture of opportunity.And all it took to change things aroundwas to allow for choice through rights identification.So why has no one ever solved this problem before?It's because it's a big problem,and it's complicated and messy.It's not uncommon for a single videoto have multiple rights owners.There's musical labels.There's multiple music publishers.And each of these can vary by country.There's lots of caseswhere we have more than one work mashed together.So we have to manage many claimsto the same video.

YouTube's Content ID system addresses all of these cases.But the system only works throughthe participation of rights owners.If you have content that others are uploading to YouTube,you should register in the Content ID system,and then you'll have the choiceabout how your content is used.And think carefully about the policies that you attach to that content.By simply blocking all reuse,you'll miss out on new art forms,new audiences,new distribution channelsand new revenue streams.

But it's not just about dollars and impressions.Just look at all the joythat was spread through progressive rights managementand new technology.And I think we can all agree that joy is definitely an idea worth spreading.

Thank you.(Applause)

No comments:

Post a Comment

All comments are welcomed as far as they are constructive and polite.

La vejez. Drama y tarea, pero también una oportunidad, por Santiago Kovadloff

The following information is used for educational purposes only. La vejez. Drama y tarea, pero también una oportunidad Los años permiten r...