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YouTube gives creators the way to identify stolen videos


YouTube monitors millions of videos on its service to ensure that copyright or community standards are not infringed. The company removed 8.3 million videos for violating community guidelines in the last quarter of 2017.

But has not renewed the Content ID system to tag copyrighted videos since 2013, but Google's video-sharing service does not release the new Match's copyright. Make a tag for videos that match the videos of original creators.

According to Variety, the new tool has been tested for about a year and is expected to be launched next week to channels with more than 100,000 subscribers. Qualified Creators will see the copyright section in the left navigation bar of YouTube Studio.
The Special Matches tab will also show any similar videos that the new YouTube gadget recognizes. Creators will then be able to send a message to the channel that infringed the copyright, request removal, or simply archive the match for not taking action.
YouTube is alerting creators that it does not necessarily mean that copyright has been automatically infringed by other channels if a matching video has been found. This video may be included under fair use standards, fair dealing, or a similar copyright exception. Publishing, and therefore allowed to be published by someone other than you.
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