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#16
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Re: Video Stealing
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Though FIRST is the video provider (e.g. through the AV hookups at the venue), their agreement with the film crew may not necessarily specify a transfer of copyright. In the U.S., absent a work for hire agreement, the person operating the camera is the copyright holder of the video.1 (The lack of such an agreement would be unlikely, but to the extent that FIRST believed the webcast was a one-time event rather than a body of content that could be preserved and used forever, it's not inconceivable that the contract could omit this.) For the same reason, the person operating their own camera at a FIRST event owns the copyright to that video. If there was editing and production work that was creative in nature, then there would be a copyright embodied in those elements, and separate from the camera work. Again, this could be assigned to FIRST by contract, and probably is. The main complications arise as a result of the content of the video. FIRST has music playing in the background (which is presumably under licence); they don't own that copyright, and therefore can't transfer it.2 To the extent that creative performances take place (perhaps in the form of a speech or the rendition of a national anthem, but almost certainly not gameplay), those are copyrighted by their performers, and FIRST can't transfer that copyright either. If you re-use that content, you have to be ready to assert that your use of the portions for which you have not secured copyright approval are fair use or de minimis infringement (too small to cause any meaningful harm). Or you have to hope they don't find out and start checking items off the list I provided above. Another complication arises because the video host can terminate its agreement with the uploader, likely for little or no cause. Even if you legitimately own the copyright, the video host can (legally, but perhaps unethically) kick you off and take the video down. Users who are frequently the target of DMCA takedowns may find themselves in that situation. By the way, don't file a DMCA takedown request if you're not the copyright holder. Misrepresentation will open you to liability for damages. 1 In Canada, the law is a little more complicated, but ought to work out the same way in the case of a work for hire. 2 In theory, they actually could write such a copyright transfer into the contract, but I doubt it's there. I bet the agreement only covers FIRST, not downstream re-users. |
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#17
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Re: Video Stealing
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This issue is pretty black and white. There should be no need for discussion about fair use or whether the videos are for "educational use". WFN is ripping other people's videos from websites, re-uploading them, displaying them as their own content, and serving ads on them. It's pretty safe to say no one is okay with this. As Chris said (and as I pointed out in a private message to Adam - which like Hallry's email never got a response), the logic that there's "no source of income from the ad" doesn't mean they're not ads. Likewise, the logic behind planning to attribute people, but in the meantime not removing the videos or contacting the original owners and making sure it's alright if they re-upload the videos is flawed. A quick solution for this would be for WFN to do the right thing, and just link to the YouTube videos on their website, like The Blue Alliance does. To Adam: If you need a programmer to replace the ripped videos with the proper embedded YouTube links, I'm sure we can work out a deal Last edited by Zach O : 27-03-2014 at 03:08. |
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#18
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Re: Video Stealing
I knew FIRST was all about giving students "real life" engineering situations. It's now evolved to giving students "real life" legal situations
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#19
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Re: Video Stealing
I'm not qualified for the legal discussion but I like the benefits of a stable video archive. Teams don't always last and don't always manage the transition of accounts. (There's an old 610 channel with a video of someone tripping that we can't remove for example)
The only reason we have the 1996 championship is because someone recorded it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8N6lnle1fc Is this ok? |
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#20
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Re: Video Stealing
Everyone,
I don't have time right now to write an at length response to this entire thread. But I would like to make sure you all know that I am aware of the thread. I'm going to do my best with the time I have right now to respond to some comments, I will get to the rest later tonight or tomorrow. If you read through my responses to the last thread I stated that Quote:
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From what I can read, there are 2 main problems at hand. One is the fact that we don't credit the source, which I will fix. Second is the people who would rather fight to call something theirs (which I'm not trying to take away from them) instead of help the cause and help spread the word of FIRST. Requesting video take downs is of benefit to no one. If people have specific issues. Lets come up with ideas to solve them instead of just complaining. - Bochek |
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#21
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Re: Video Stealing
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EDIT: I've check through all of the emails on both accounts...Can't find anything from WFN. Last edited by Hallry : 27-03-2014 at 11:30. |
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#22
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Re: Video Stealing
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https://www.youtube.com/static?template=terms (section 4) You're also connecting that breach with the FIRST name. |
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#23
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Re: Video Stealing
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Kinda. The Youtube Partner Program is a service people sign up for to get paid for videos. It's a reason why artists actually post music videos on YouTube and let you listen to them for free. Quote:
Also, attribution isn't connected legally to fair use, but it certainly is the morally correct thing to do. Last edited by Lucario : 27-03-2014 at 08:21. |
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#24
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Re: Video Stealing
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If we're giving out gold stars for "spreading the word of FIRST" - who would you give more credit to... A) The teams filming, editing, and uploading events - who work with the admins of TBA to link match results to match video. or B) Someone using a bot to download videos from youtube, upload them to a Vimeo account, and serving them on a superfluous website laden with ads. If your view is that re-uploading videos to a separate account is beneficial - knock yourself out. But to do so without the permission of the creator (in this case the explicit disapproval of the creator), isn't the proper way to go about it. I know that team 25 has purposely not published their match video from Hatboro since they don't want you to rip and re-upload it. That's not a net gain for the FIRST community. |
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#25
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Re: Video Stealing
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Instead of trying to shut them down, why not just roll with it? If you want to take credit for this worthy activity, why not just talk about how many of your videos are featured on the distribution site? Uploading credit is certainly something to ask for, but in the case of an uncooperative host, a small watermark in the corner will certainly do the trick. Just talk about how you're working with other teams/people to expand FIRST beyond your own personal capabilities. |
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#26
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Re: Video Stealing
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It is not the responsibility of the people "providing" (its not really providing at the moment because they were never asked) the content to talk about this on their own. This is the responsibility of whomever is running the website. How about I grab pictures of you off of Facebook (or other media site) and use them on a website for promotional work. I'm not going to ask you can just tell everyone that its you. This is not how the real world works. What they are doing is great in that they are providing a database of videos for matches. While redundant since we have TBA they each have their own way of doing things, every good thing will have competition. With that being said, more people would be open to the idea of linking their match videos to these websites if they are 1. ASKED and 2. credit is given either by a disclaimer or a link to the original work. To whomever is running this: please stop taking videos for the time being and resume once you come up with a process for asking for permission and giving credit where it is due. You are only hurting yourself more by creating a bad reputation of your website. I believe your intentions are good to create a better video database considering when you started your efforts TBA wasn't getting much new content. |
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#27
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Re: Video Stealing
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Yes, credit should be given where credit is due, as I mention in my above post, but modifying their behavior is not something entirely within your control, while adapting to it certainly is. (You also won't find me on Facebook- I have a thing against them ) |
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#28
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Re: Video Stealing
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It's an interesting time now. Back then I think the WatchFIRSTNow effort would be praised but with the advance of content copyright and online streaming, things have changed quite a bit. Speaking of FIRST Video Archive, are there ways of linking those old videos to TBA? Or do they need to be uploaded to YouTube for that to occur? Would uploading them to a YouTube account spark the same kind of discussion we're having here? Last edited by Ryan Dognaux : 27-03-2014 at 10:03. |
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#29
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Re: Video Stealing
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I think because of the controversy over your site, your brand is compromised and could benefit from relaunching under a different name with different management to provide a clean break from said controversies. I demand you provide me all the supporting source of your site so I can make the necessary changes and relaunch it under my management as "ThisIsFIRST". Under my new management it will be much more successful at helping the cause and spreading the word of FIRST. So you should totally hand over all that source to paid to develop. I'll (obviously) just rip the content from your video sharing accounts myself. |
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#30
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Re: Video Stealing
What is YouTube or Vimeo's policy on accounts that get deleted/banned? As in, if an account was deleted or banned, is there a way for the account holder to access (ie 'take back') the videos they uploaded on to the account?
Preface: This is not an opinion on WFN or their execution/implementation. I've only skimmed over the details of that case, so I'm not willing to provide an opinion on it. In general, I agree that having one, centralized community-driven storage of videos would be useful. So that videos won't get lost, and are easier to access for people who want to design portals that showcase those videos (similar to TBA). For example, a rather simple implementation would be to have one YouTube channel called 'FIRST videos' that anyone can upload to. Is there a particular reason why people who filmed/edited videos want to upload them? Do they get money from them? (I'm just trying to see what potential issues might arise from such a centralized solution, not attack anyone). |
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