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Apparently thousands of more or less advanced guitar players publish their interpretations of standards on youtube, soundcloud et other platforms. This is a perfect situation for learning guitar, listening to ways others approach a song or sometimes simple streaming. I could learn more from these in a few weeks, than from years of rehearsing in the eighties.
But one question remains and I could not find a satisfactory answer: how is the copyright-situation for these clips?
Is really all of it plain copyright infringement? What do I have to do, if I want publish a simple darn that dream on soundcloud without risking to pay thousands of dollars?
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11-09-2020 11:10 AM
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According to a Rick Beato video I saw, If you get enough hits to make money YouTube will flag the video and you can select to pay your $0.00001 per view to the copyright holder or delete the video. It's all automated, don't worry about it. Even those unofficial posts of songs/albums have the cash going to the right owner.
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It’s doubtful that you will have enough listens for it to become monetized anyway. On the off chance that it does, it will get a copyright claim and that will be all there is to it on YouTube. The money will go to copyright holders. On SoundCloud, it’s extremely unlikely that will ever come up.
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Well my motivation lies not so much in being seen or making money. More to return a little from things I learned on the one hand, to share licks or concepts with friends living at the other end of the planet, to educate my children, or simply to link some demo-songs to band websites I'm maintaining.
As far as I found out, none of that is possible (in Germany), because I would have to pay 240€ at least for every website I'd like to use, if I correctly understood the terms of Gema.
So - sharing licks in a secure manner does not seem to be possible. Everything seems to depend on not being noticed on youtube or soundcloud by the wrong persons. Strange times we live in .... - I ask myself what Mozart would have written, not being allowed to "steal" ideas from Bach...
Thanks anyway for the answers
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Originally Posted by GolanTrevize
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in Germany its 240€ per year for 72000 clicks. It's the smallest package. I think it's supposed to work for the website, that is provided to them, no a song.
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Try to upload an arrangement of Hotel California and find out
It seems random, I have several Burt Bacharach arrangements and recording of Henze pieces (one with the score) on my tiny, 12 follower channel. Got a copyright claim on one Bacharach tune and one Henze piece, but not the others. Never going to make any money so its no issue
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My youtube and soundcloud pages are basically just a load of old jazz standards I have recorded. In 12 years I have never had a copyright claim on any of them. Even if you do, they generally just put adverts on it, or worst case scenario, demand that you remove it, as far as I know.
Are you trying to monetise it somehow? (I am not.)
Youtube did offer to monetise my Blue Bossa video but it would have meant them putting adverts on it, I said no thanks.
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Originally Posted by grahambop
For what it is worth, ReverbNation removed my cover of Sunny from my page without explanation. Searching through the FAQ, I read that such actions are typically the result of a copyright concern.
By the way - love your cover of Poinciana!
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I publish my songs on streaming media thru DistroKid (pro account à $80 a year but they have cheaper options). This automatically secures the copyright for that song. In theory it gives you the possibility to check on infringement and take legal action, but you would have to do it yourself..... impossible of course. They do offer a (paid, $7.50 per song) option to check for you if someone else posts videos with your song under it (I think that only concerns the original recording, I don’t think they can spot someone covering it). It works, the guy who put out our videoclip with the song under it got a warning and YouTube puts an advertisement to the song and if there already is, re-routes the revenue to you, the original artist.
It did not make me a billionaire yet, but I have still hope!
I once posted a video of my old 1956 record player playing on facebook and fb muted the sound because It was playing an Elvis Presley song, which Sony owns the rights to and forbids the use.Last edited by Little Jay; 11-30-2020 at 02:53 AM.
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Originally Posted by 3rdwaverider
Can anyone date this? goodwill epiphone
Yesterday, 05:40 PM in For Sale