I'm very curious how some youtubers use very known songs for example do it with dan's intro sogn, since I also want to use some music that I can't put on my videos because otherwise it would get flagged....
Anyone knows?
Anyone knows?
I'm very curious how some youtubers use very known songs for example do it with dan's intro sogn, since I also want to use some music that I can't put on my videos because otherwise it would get flagged....
Anyone knows?
I was a bit curious about that myself. I know you can buy a license from the song's publisher. It's called a synchronization license. They may also have some kind of deal with YouTube where you can use their song, but they will be allowed to advertise on that video's page. Could be they haven't been caught yet. lol I know some people who upload movies will speed it up or mess with the audio to prevent it from being found by YouTube's bots. Never tried any of it myself, though, because I use my own stuff.
Do It With Dan is screwed when he gets caught.My guess is they haven't been caught yet
thanks dude! also thanks for the link, haven't seen that yet on youtube hahaYoutube's audio detection is unbelievably powerful. Don't think for a minute that they haven't detected the songs, even if they've been slowed down or sped up, pitch changed, or even just using a small clip of the song.
Most songs are able to be used on Youtube as long as you don't monetize the video, you can check out the searchable database here.
It's possible that they have purchased licenses for the music, although it would seem to me that it would be a massive pain in the ass to do and would probably offset any earnings from the video anyway so my guess is that they simply don't monetize the video and all is fine and dandy
Nope, I've been flagged for 3 seconds of a car radio playing.Does anyone know what the policy is on using snippets of a song? I've been watching a lot of Hunter Honda lately and he uses quite a few popular songs, but only short snippets. I've heard a rumour that anything less than 15 seconds is allowed. Does anybody know for sure?
Nope, I've been flagged for 3 seconds of a car radio playing.
None monetization and the record company having a deal with youtube. IE you use a song that is copyright but do not monetize it, youtube picks it up and passes the monetization over to the songs publishers and they get a cut. If the copyright/publisher does not have a deal with youtube but objects video is taken down and you get flagged.
Man, that sucks! So how DO they get away with it? There's no way most of them are slipping it past YT's recognition systems. I also can't believe that motovloggers with 100k+ subs are not monetizing the majority of their videos. Or am I missing something?
How do you know if the publisher has a deal with youtube or not? The songs in the audio library?
Does anyone know what the policy is on using snippets of a song? I've been watching a lot of Hunter Honda lately and he uses quite a few popular songs, but only short snippets. I've heard a rumour that anything less than 15 seconds is allowed. Does anybody know for sure?