Leafhopper
Banned
Was just about to post this, and I 100% agree.
Sure, Nintendo. You have full legal right to your IP. And that's actually a good thing. You're just going about it the WAAAAAAAAAAY wrong way.
Nintendo didn't take the video down.
Was just about to post this, and I 100% agree.
Sure, Nintendo. You have full legal right to your IP. And that's actually a good thing. You're just going about it the WAAAAAAAAAAY wrong way.
Way to go, only quoting the part of my post that carters you. How about you read the block where I praised people who are making good videos and live by it?
And no, I live in Germany, but the more you know, even here we have to work for our money.
And playing games while talking shit is not work, it's a hobby. And he cries that he has to give about 30% from the revenue of what, 3 videos so far to the legal owner of the core of those videos?
Talking about a greedy brat. I think the 30% he has to give up are more than covered by the recent cry and rang video.
...Some people here, wow...
Again, what are they protecting their IP from? That's what doesn't add up. Being used in a YouTube video doesn't actually seem like a threat to their business or IP. In fact, even if the impact is tiny, it actually seems beneficial.
So I do agree they're entitled to protect their IP but...I'm not convinced their IP is actually in danger here.
I sincerely doubt those companies are paying Nintendo a dime. The difference is Nintendo is stuck in last century and hasn't evolved in a hundred different ways, and recognizing how to get your content viewed by young people is one of them. They view those sites as the only acceptable ways to get their content out to the audience.
So, you agree100% with the wrong thing?
Nintendo did not send a takedown notice. So why is Cliffy talking about take downs? If he referring to this? Or is he being daft like most of this thread as well?
So, you agree100% with the wrong thing?
Nintendo did not send a takedown notice. So why is Cliffy talking about take downs? If he referring to this? Or is he being daft like most of this thread as well?
So, you agree100% with the wrong thing?
Nintendo did not send a takedown notice. So why is Cliffy talking about take downs? If he referring to this? Or is he being daft like most of this thread as well?
He probably confused what happened, but he posted that recently(Past 10 minutes), so he's probably referring to Nintendo. Besides, let's not pretend that Nintendo taking control of a video is any better than taking it down.
For a youtuber point of view, taking down the video or not getting any ad money is basically the same.
Imagine trying to push a family friendly image promoting your best games. You fire up Youtube and notice the most popular personalities displaying your family friendly games are swearing up a storm and using slurs left and right.
That's what they're covering when they want to "review" videos before release.
Yeah, I am going back to Xenoblade 3D. I should not have to explain why I hate Nintendo as a company.That's all I'm going to say on this. I'm not going to waste my time on this stupid shit when I could be playing a game right now.
Imagine trying to push a family friendly image promoting your best games. You fire up Youtube and notice the most popular personalities displaying your family friendly games are swearing up a storm and using slurs left and right.
That's what they're covering when they want to "review" videos before release.
Servers are not that expensive. From my experience, they come last in terms of costs when running websites and such.
what i find so strange about it being nintendo to do this is that they don't really do games you would just want to watch anyway.
i would kinda get it if it was ready at dawn with the order, but when was the last time a nintendo game was story above anything else?
Well, the rationale obviously being that Youtube influencers are "average gamers" - just with a capture card, camera, some knowledge about video production and a knack for entertaining others.Is it sad, that developers try to make games, that are worthy for youtubers to play?
Makes games that are generally great and that the average gamer wants to play...
For a youtuber point of view, taking down the video or not getting any ad money is basically the same.
If the video was taken down, he'd have a copyright strike on his channel. Plus the video could still attract the Nintendo audience to Angry Joe and earn him a few more views on the videos he does profit from. I'd say it's not entirely the same.
Again, what are they protecting their IP from? That's what doesn't add up. Being used in a YouTube video doesn't actually seem like a threat to their business or IP. In fact, even if the impact is tiny, it actually seems beneficial.
So I do agree they're entitled to protect their IP but...I'm not convinced their IP is actually in danger here.
I could see an argument made if we were talking about a game based entirely on narrative with minimal gameplay...but that is the antithesis of Nintendo games.
Again, what are they protecting their IP from? That's what doesn't add up. Being used in a YouTube video doesn't actually seem like a threat to their business or IP. In fact, even if the impact is tiny, it actually seems beneficial.
So I do agree they're entitled to protect their IP but...I'm not convinced their IP is actually in danger here.
I could see an argument made if we were talking about a game based entirely on narrative with minimal gameplay...but that is the antithesis of Nintendo games.
A) And I'd argue that it's not. So obviously we won't make any headway there. But it is relevant in the sense that Nintendo put in the work to create the IP, so they have the legal right to prevent others from profiting from it.
B) "Arbitrary" is an interesting way to describe it. It seems like Nintendo's stance is based on the law, meaning it's anything but arbitrary.
C) A small indie title is much different than a Nintendo title. The fact of the matter is that the folks at Nintendo believe they don't need Joe's "free advertising," and they're likely more qualified to make that call than anyone here on neogaf.
Taking down a video isn't the same as wanting to share revenue.It's pretty obvious. Sure, Ninty didn't take the video down, but the principle of the tweets AND the discussion remains.
Joe must have took it down on his own. AGAIN. STILL the same principle. Nintendo has every right. Sure. BUT, it's also very foolish of them. Exposure is SUPER important for business.
The video was not flagged or taken down. The content was detected by Youtubes system as being of a Nintendo game, and so the ad revenue from the video then goes to Nintendo instead of the uploader. The video itself was not taken offline until Joe did so himselve because he doesn't want Nintendo making money from it.
So basically Nintendo is saying: this is my content, I should earn the money. Joe is saying: this is my content, I should earn the money.
In the end, legally it is Nintendo's content and they are within their right. Not everybody agrees with that, but that is how it is.
If the video was taken down, he'd have a copyright strike on his channel. Plus the video could still attract the Nintendo audience to Angry Joe and earn him a few more views on the videos he does profit from. I'd say it's not entirely the same.
That's stupid and I don't think it's the same.
"Well I can't make money off of this video I edited and worked on for hours. Might as well just scrap it and not let anyone see it, even if my fans might enjoy it."
That's stupid and I don't think it's the same.
"Well I can't make money off of this video I edited and worked on for hours. Might as well just scrap it and not let anyone see it, even if my fans might enjoy it."
Not talking about sites, sorry wasn't I clear. I meant servers for the games he play. Dedicated servers he rents.
Ah, I see. But surely that can't add up to more then a few hundred a month.Not talking about sites, sorry wasn't I clear. I meant servers for the games he play. Dedicated servers he rents.
Nintendo is a very controlling company when it comes to their IPs. They want to know how it is being presented and what is being done with it. Like someone said earlier: imagine having a game targeted at kids and being marketed as kid friendly. Now this kid or parents go on Youtube and click a Let's Play of someone swearing every other sentence with that game running. They don't want to be linked to that kind of content.Ah, I see. Still, it seems like way too much trouble and bad PR to go through with this. I don't think these decisions come from Kyoto, so I really wonder why they take such a stance.
Again, what are they protecting their IP from? That's what doesn't add up. Being used in a YouTube video doesn't actually seem like a threat to their business or IP. In fact, even if the impact is tiny, it actually seems beneficial.
So I do agree they're entitled to protect their IP but...I'm not convinced their IP is actually in danger here.
I could see an argument made if we were talking about a game based entirely on narrative with minimal gameplay...but that is the antithesis of Nintendo games.
Like I mentioned, he probably misread AJs tweets/misinterpreted the situation, but I guess you don't care as long as you can imply that most of the thread is stupid~ How quaint of you..
Edit-I think it's getting too personal for you, Kintaro.
"I'd totally be able to make money from YouTube if I was as lucky as those guys with millions of subscribers!"I have no sympathy for him. YouTube isn't a real job, it's winning the lottery.
I'm Crowd C: The would be business owner that works with creators and not actively against them. I would use Nintendo's Creator system to create a good working relationship with the company for future investments, I would make some money doing it and I would diversify and create more exposure to my site where my other products (that make me more money) have a much greater chance of being seen. I would also understand that in other markets, creators are properly compensated for their work for use in other work (licensing is used in movies, TV, games, and music) and that gaming is REALLY FUCKING LUCKY that it is strange about all of this and ride this pony while I could.
Or Milton-Bradley if you record yourself playing Monoploy?To all the people defending this, do you think it would be OK for Cards Against Humanity to send out copyright claims to any video that plays their game?
Removing 2 million views of free advertising seems like a very, very silly thing to do.
Also it looks really bad to other gamers and makes Nintendo look like an unthinking, corporate, bully.
Angry Joe sounds like a nob too, but Nintendo really are unthinkingly stupid.
To all the people defending this, do you think it would be OK for Cards Against Humanity to send out copyright claims to any video that plays their game?
You praised one guy for the "work" he puts into his videos, while bashing AJ.
That tells me you haven't even bothered to watch any of his content, because if you had, you would know he puts a lot of work into his videos. His reviews can be up to 40 minutes long as he's very detailed, and even dresses up into costumes to reflect the theme of what he's reviewing. To blow him off as some knucklehead that "plays games while talking shit" is ignorant.
It really falls in line with some Gaffers having a blind dislike of a guy because he's successful on YouTube. Even though you have no clue about what he produces.
That's all I'm going to say on this. I'm not going to waste my time on this stupid shit when I could be playing a game right now.
Or Milton-Bradley if you record yourself playing Monoploy?
It is pretty much the same thing, right?
This is Mario Party.......it's a virtual board game. There is no story.Please show me where CAH has the ability of being played in its entirety on video so the viewer wouldn't have to play the game itself to get all the content available?
Also show me where the music and video are in CAH please.
I'll wait.
Why not? I get this attitude with a lot of people here. People watch, ad companies pay. That's a job. Fix your jealousy.
Removing 2 million views of free advertising seems like a very, very silly thing to do.
Also it looks really bad to other gamers and makes Nintendo look like an unthinking, corporate, bully.
Angry Joe sounds like a nob too, but Nintendo really are unthinkingly stupid.
That should have been obvious when their solution to a game-breaking glitch in Metroid Other M was to ask people to mail them their save files. This was in 2010. They've progressed a little sense that hilarity, but not much.It vividly displays how well-versed Nintendo is at this new-fangled 'internet' thing. As in, they are fucking dinosaurs.
Why would anyone want to bend over backwards for Nintendo to take 60% of profits when they can upload anything else and get 100%. Thay's the point. Youtubers doesn't need Nintendo, they can upload a million other things for revenue and 100% of the profit. They'd probably like to upload Nintendo things, but it's the principle of the thing, why reward or work with 1 stubborn company for a terrible policy.
A lot of this thread is silly. In both ways.
Personal? You have someone bringing up the recent Indiana Law which helps promote active discrimination for fucks sake. lol
This is just fascinating from a business point of view. You have one company who has made it pointedly clear how they want to deal with this sort of content. They have a program set up with 60/70% cuts of revenue. You have one guy who KNOWS of this program yet went outside of it and is angry that Nintendo, who was clear on what they would do, did what they did. He then takes down the video (robbing people of viewing it AND negating the work he did to make it...when he could use it to build his business) and makes a rant video which he can make money from (and I don't believe this is the first time he has done this).
You have big vs. small, good vs. bad and all sorts of this in this thread.
I think its fucking fascinating.
Yes, in this case, it is.
This is Mario Party.......