Schfifty
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2009
- Messages
- 957
- Reaction score
- 673
I can certainly imagine channels matching corporations' names getting a strike, moreso possibly even deleted. This reminds me of Wikipedia's username policy - any accounts that are names of companies/organizations or promote them get blocked indefinitely. I guess with YouTube, if the channel got strikes instead of getting deleted, it'd at least give them a warning to change their name. Definitely not the case with Wikipedia...if it violates the policy, it's blocked.But now get this: we've all discussed copyright strikes before in this thread, but I read about something that is absolutely and truly scary: some guy recently got a copyright (more accurately, a trademark) strike for his entire channel - not just a video he uploaded, his entire channel got a strike; evidentally, the username of his channel just happens to coincidentally be the same as a Canadian media company, and the owner of said company filed the strike because he felt that person's channel was interfering with the search results for their content, thus doing damage to their brand. Can you believe that? I mean, copyright strikes on videos you upload are bad enough, but can you imagine getting a strike on your entire channel all because of your username?
Also, another thing I was just thinking about: what really is with all these videos of commercial songs with artist hashtags? You know, like when you see a channel such as "#Madonna" or "Madonna - Topic", and you see all or most of their songs with album art and the song info in the video? How did this all start happening?