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#1
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Video Stealing
I am a fan of competition it lowers prices and delivers better products to consumers. The blue alliance has done a great job of an open source place to where you can get photos and videos of teams, and IMO saving the history of first. What the blue alliance does is great. They ask for donations of videos and pictures and never posts things that they do not have permission to post.
This leads me to my title. There are is a new site(s) that are taking videos from youtube and uploading them to their own site(s). It is being done without permission from the owners of those videos, and frankly its wrong. While FIRST events are open to the public and anyone can record them this does not mean you can then take the videos they (the owners) recorded and use them as your own. It would be different if you (the video stealers) were using "Fair Use" (Examples of fair use are works used for news reporting, criticism, comment, scientific research, teaching, and parody.), But this is not what happening. The videos are being used completely unedited just to promote their own site(s). My suggestion to the group(s) doing this is to go invent a better mouse trap if you want to compete with the blue alliance, but stealing videos is not the path I would recommend. I am also sure the teams your stealing the videos from would also appreciate it. Last edited by nuggetsyl : 26-03-2014 at 18:45. |
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#2
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Re: Video Stealing
I agree that ripping and re-uploading other people's videos without permission is a problem, especially if the re-uploader is personally gaining something from the action. There was a thread not too long ago that went down a similar path of reasoning here.
Last edited by Jean Tenca : 26-03-2014 at 19:05. Reason: Spelling |
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#3
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Re: Video Stealing
I didn't know this was such a huge problem. (As in I didn't know people were doing it.)
Whenever I use someone else's videos on my team's site. Which I may have done once. It was using the YouTube embedding function. Therefore I never took/stole their content at all I just "shared" it. I think the whole concept of sharing video/photo content vs stealing content is a bit mixed up and because of how public and open places like YouTube are the lines between sharing and stealing are somewhat hard to see. I get your problem and I agree, but I also think it's too easy for people to take content for themselves and Google/YouTube should have fixed the big allowing such easy downloading of video content ages ago. |
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#4
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Re: Video Stealing
You should be fine if you use the embed function on youtube. If you don't want your videos embedded on other people's sites then you can turn this off in your video settings on youtube.
Now if they are downloading them and reposting them without the youtube embedding then it is wrong. |
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#5
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Re: Video Stealing
This is not about sharing videos.
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#6
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Re: Video Stealing
Could you share with us which site this is? Or at least PM it to me as I would be interested to know.
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#7
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Re: Video Stealing
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I understand what WFN is trying to do by archiving the videos outside personal youtube accounts and in some cases they are given permission to grab videos. I just hope they find a way to achieve this without stepping on people's toes. |
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#8
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Re: Video Stealing
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If the other site (or WatchFIRSTNow, if that's indeed the site to which you refer) were to make an explicit assertion of fair use, and specify the grounds, I think we'd be more able to assess their intentions. (Note that the lack of such a declaration could be read as ignorance, malice or a desire to keep their arguments in reserve in case of legal proceedings.) For completeness, I should also point out that it could be fair use/fair dealing, and still be wrong, because of other moral considerations. If those are at issue, let's lay them out and discuss them. Last edited by Tristan Lall : 26-03-2014 at 21:38. |
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#9
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Re: Video Stealing
Classic Canada: first they steal our American pharmaceuticals, now they take our videos! Life will never be the same!
Last edited by PayneTrain : 26-03-2014 at 22:05. |
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#10
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Re: Video Stealing
I'm pretty sure that the aforementioned usage of FIRST recordings falls under the category of fair use (on watchfirstnow.com)- it might fall in the category of education, since it is educating the public on what FIRST does. While the original recorder technically has the exclusive rights to public distribution, the fairness doctrine overrides this right when it applies.
There's 4 items considered when determining if a scenario classifies as fair use, but these two items (from 17 U.S.C. § 107, fair use doctrine) are, in my opinion, most salient to this case: 1. the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes; 4. the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work. It can be reasonably argued that this work is for educational purposes (as it educates the public) and the website, seeing that it is devoid of advertisements, seems to be of a non-profit nature. (I will admit the WHOIS obfuscation is annoying... Grr... those people...) It can also be argued that these videos have minimal market value that's being lost in this case (I mean, no one's getting paid from YouTube yet, right?) and based on the number of views these videos get, I'm not even sure losses in ad revenue can even be remedied in court (is it even worth the filing fee, anyways?) Personally, annoying as it may be, I think that this website has a strong case for fair use. Without any monetary market for these videos, legal arguments against this site may not only fail, but be detrimental to FIRST's goals of expanding the program. (TLDR) People will share things on the internet no matter what you do; just let them be. |
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#11
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Re: Video Stealing
Can' tell if ignorant or joking.
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#12
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Re: Video Stealing
OK I am going to go post every episode of pawn stars and myth busters on YouTube. I won't ask for ads and just tell the discovery channel and history channel its educational so I won't get in trouble.
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#13
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Re: Video Stealing
Not that it makes things right or anything, but an offended party that has had its video ripped and uploaded to a different video sharing site can always file a DMCA takedown with said video sharing site. As long as you're the copyright holder of the material, you can do that and it's likely to get the video taken down or at least get the offender put on notice if enough complaints are made.
Mind you, you need to be that actual copyright holder for the material. If all you did was record the FIRST provided video stream, then it's probably FIRST that's the copyright holder, since they did all the production, etc. I think unedited, uncommented video from your own camera of an FRC event is probably shaky on whether you're the copyright holder. And something like RoboShow is very clearly original material that the RoboShow guys hold the copyright to. |
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#14
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Re: Video Stealing
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And look at how differently that would play out if the aggrieved party were a FIRST participant. Would the DMCA process happen? Would the lawsuit happen? It's not unreasonable to think that you won't actually get in trouble. Look at the variety of copyrighted content on video hosting sites—probably including those series—as an illustration of that fact. Whether or not it's right, the uploader does indeed stand a reasonable chance of getting away with it. |
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#15
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Re: Video Stealing
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