freenudemacusers
Member
you're new here. get used to it.People seriously making excuses for nintendo? What?
you're new here. get used to it.People seriously making excuses for nintendo? What?
There is no dangerous precedent. Rather the same precedent that stops the website from putting up half the film with commentary over it is the same one applied here.
I thought he only owned a Xbox and a ps4
You still aren't getting the intended gaming experience though.
This also doesn't include the tons of other games that don't really have stories and are made for pick up and play sessions.
There are people who watch through youtube entire videogames and don't end up buying them. How much this impact sells or not is arguable (comparable to the question how much piracy affects sales if the perpetrator couldn't afford to buy all these movies in the first place).Horrible comparison.
TV shows and movies are made for the purpose of being watched. Video games are made for the purpose of being played.
A gamer creating a video of himself having a lot of fun with a video game isn't going to negatively impact the video game -- people who are watching it still aren't getting the true experience.
This is absolutely the silliest distinction I've read regarding trying to suss out why video game footage operates outside the boundaries of copyright law.
Also for the people suggesting that YouTubers make certain types of videos "because they owe the fans", when you're suggesting in this kind of situation where Joe can't monetize the video you're basically asking Joe to work his fulltime job without getting paid. Jealously or not, making these videos, editing them, and hosting them on his channel is his full time job. You can't just ask someone to burn part of their work week and income because you think they owe you.
This is absolutely the silliest distinction I've read regarding trying to suss out why video game footage operates outside the boundaries of copyright law.
There is absolutely no distinction in copyright law whether the creative work is interactive or not. It's a creative work and it falls under protection. Case closed. Like I said, if you disagree with our current copyright law, take it up with the government.
Sad but true, the misguided sense of loyalty people feel to these multi-billion dollar multinationals is just the most bizarre thing.you're new here. get used to it.
Content ID does nothing to your account. I've got over a dozen.
Spoonyexperiment wanted do just this, but was not allowed.To the people defending the youtubers making let's plays (not counting reviews) and monetizing it, do you think it should be alright to stream yourself watching a movie and commenting on it like a riff track? My main issue is some of these guys just play a game and then say meaningless things over the top and act like they added a lot to that video content.
Obviously it's ridiculous to claim ad revenue of this as a game company. Almost as ridiculous as claiming that a video of someone playing a video game is the same as video of someone watching a movie. This sort of thing really makes Nintendo come across as a dinosaur.
Do you honestly think 20 minute videos with fragmented clips of gameplay from generally 8+ hour long games is equivalent to putting up a video of half a movie with commentary over it?
There is just as much equal hatred for Nintendo, given the large amount of "NDF, corporate apologist, NINTENDO DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMED" style posts in here as well.
The problem isn't hatred for youtubers in general.
It's the ones who have essentially become their own personal brand, and start making videos not based on personal passion or interests, but potential financial reward.
AngryJoe won't keep his own video up because he won't get paid for it. It's already finished, completed and everything. But he won't. Because he won't get paid. Those are the problem Youtubers.
It is an odd one to claim because he was singing nothing but praises. I guess because he put ads with it.Anyway Nintendo can do what they damn well please, it does not effect me and i really do not give a fuck, but i am curious on this part though will nintendo allow a video with criticism towards there product? Or are they only allowing videos that praise them?
I don't think anyone is arguing that copyright doesn't allow this, I think people are arguing that it's bad policy for Nintendo to actually claim it in cases like these. And people are thankfully free to disagree with corporate policies.
To the people defending the youtubers making let's plays (not counting reviews) and monetizing it, do you think it should be alright to stream yourself watching a movie and commenting on it like a riff track? My main issue is some of these guys just play a game and then say meaningless things over the top and act like they added a lot to that video content.
How is it silly? There's obviously more value lost in a video, movie, or album being streamed in comaprison to video game footage being streamed.
Some people already do that with DSP videos. They just add their own music, make minor changes and upload it on YouTube. It apparently falls under fair use. That's why you see so many anti DSP videos on YouTube. Like those this is how you don't play series people upload. I must admit some of those this is how you don't play videos are funny and show how bad DSP is at gaming lol.My response:
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The problem is you have some companies who don't give a shit and those that do (Nintendo).
I don't get the whole watching other people play..........not even a little bit. Bores me to death.
Either way, isn't he making money off of other people's stuff?
I think it's kind of funny fussing about it. It probably doesn't hurt Nintendo one bit, but he would probably pocket money from a wider crowd if he did Nintendo gaming too.
I still see a few posts with people confusing this notice he got with copyright strikes.
Nintendo did not have this video taken down.
They left it up, but all ad revenue was getting funneled to them instead.
It left no bad marks on AngryJoe's account, and does not present any threat to his account. All it did was remove the income he would receive, from this one video.
He himself set it to private so that rather than people enjoy the video and Nintendo get the revenue, no one enjoys the video and no one gets paid. (Aka, take your ball home)
He could still make these videos solely out of passion/good will, but as far as people here are concerned, that's an impossibility.
What a shitty life being an LPer like that must be, only prioritizing games you think will make you money.
He made a tweet saying that he bought his Wii U when his fans donated it to him? .............
He worked to put it together, why shouldn't he be paid? It's his show, and his subscription base! He previews, reviews, and does interviews just like any other site, yet it's a problem with Gaffers because he's on YouTube. Well that and we're dealing with Saint Nintendo that's always in the right.
Anyway Nintendo can do what they damn well please, it does not effect me and i really do not give a fuck, but i am curious on this part though will nintendo allow a video with criticism towards there product? Or are they only allowing videos that praise them?
Explain to me why a video game is not a creative work?
This is a very real law that you're trying to argue against. You are how old? Copyright law has been around for hundreds of years and even recently been strengthened. Content creators (Nintendo, not Angry Joe), are protected by this law to monetize from their creative works. If Angry Joe is monetizing from copyrighted material and not compensating the copyright holder, then he is breaking the law. Do you understand now?
If you don't like the law then do something about it.
No other Publisher is doing this besides Nintendo, EA doesn't do it, Ubisoft doesn't do it, Activision doesn't do it, Square doesn't do it, hell even Sega doesn't do it.
I could understand if this was a polarizing issue, and it was a bunch of different companies/publishers on both sides of the isle, but again this is Nintendo being Nintendo and being different vs every other major publisher letting Youtubers do their thing.
I don't think anyone is arguing that copyright doesn't allow this, I think people are arguing that it's bad policy for Nintendo to actually claim it in cases like these. And people are thankfully free to disagree with corporate policies.
Sad but true, the misguided sense of loyalty people feel to these multi-billion dollar multinationals is just the most bizarre thing.
I also agree with the person in the thread who said it sorta feels like everyone is being an asshole in this situation on both sides.
This is my take on the situation.
Guy that rarely covered Nintendo uploads video in January.
Is angry Nintendo monetise it. Rants about it.
Asks his loyal fans to buy him a Wii U. They do.
Four months later, he uploads another Nintendo video, this time played on the Wii U his fans bought.
Nintendo monetise it again! ( Shocking news! What are the chances?! /s )
Rants about it. Deletes video so nobody can see it.
you're new here. get used to it.
Yeah, under parody it is protected.Some people already do that with DSP videos. They just add their own music, make minor changes and upload it on YouTube. It apparently falls under fair use.
This is absolutely the silliest distinction I've read regarding trying to suss out why video game footage operates outside the boundaries of copyright law.
There is absolutely no distinction in copyright law whether the creative work is interactive or not. It's a creative work and it falls under protection. Case closed. Like I said, if you disagree with our current copyright law, take it up with the government.
He worked to put it together, why shouldn't he be paid? It's his show, and his subscription base! He previews, reviews, and does interviews just like any other site, yet it's a problem with Gaffers because he's on YouTube. Well that and we're dealing with Saint Nintendo that's always in the right.
I don't think anyone is arguing that copyright doesn't allow this, I think people are arguing that it's bad policy for Nintendo to actually claim it in cases like these. And people are thankfully free to disagree with corporate policies.
Sad but true, the misguided sense of loyalty people feel to these multi-billion dollar multinationals is just the most bizarre thing.
Speaking of giant bomb and ign. How does all that work with Nintendo ip? Do they have to pay for the footage or royalties or anything? Because if they don't that totally changes what I think about this whole situation.
Poor guy.
Can't get money for his hard working of sitting on his ass playing games.
This youtube money shit should end forever and you would see how many of those "gamers" are really passionate about the games they play and continue to upload videos.
Was that during the SNES era?Nintendo is always behind the technology times. Remember their stance on renting games?
I hope the people defending Nintendo in this thread never rented a nintendo game!
To the people defending the youtubers making let's plays (not counting reviews) and monetizing it, do you think it should be alright to stream yourself watching a movie and commenting on it like a riff track?
My main issue is some of these guys just play a game and then say meaningless things over the top and act like they added a lot to that video content.
The people saying "a game is obviously different from a movie/music", I get it. That makes perfect sense and is reality intuitive.
But does that kind of argument hold up in a copyright court under the current laws?
I think the one area I get confused on is why LP are OK on "traditional" gaming websites like GB or IGN, but frowned upon on YT.
I also agree with the person in the thread who said it sorta feels like everyone is being an asshole in this situation on both sides.