Viacom Demands YouTube Nix 100,000 Clips
Owner Of MTV And VHI Says YouTube Won't Remove Unauthorized Clips
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(AP / CBS)
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Viacom said in a statement that after several months of talks with YouTube and its corporate parent, the online search leader Google Inc., "it has become clear that YouTube is unwilling to come to a fair market agreement that would make Viacom content available to YouTube users."
Viacom said that YouTube and Google had failed to deliver on several "filtering tools" to control unauthorized video from appearing on the hugely popular site.
The company was now asking YouTube to take the clips down, but stopped short of filing a lawsuit.
Under federal copyright law, online services such as YouTube are generally immune from liability as long as it responds to takedown requests such as these, which YouTube often does. Less clear legally is what happens when another user posts the same video, something commonly done on the free video-sharing site.
YouTube said in a statement that it would comply with the request from Viacom and said it cooperates "with all copyright holders to identify and promptly remove infringing content as soon as we are officially notified."
The company also said it was "unfortunate that Viacom will no longer be able to benefit from YouTube's passionate audience which has helped to promote many of Viacom's shows."
In November, YouTube agreed to delete nearly 30,000 files after the Japan Society for Rights of Authors, Composers and Publishers complained of copyright infringement.
Some media companies such as CBS Corp. and General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal have made deals to allow YouTube to use video clips from their programming, but others have yet to agree with the site over ways to get compensated for the use of their copyrighted material.
Universal Music Group, a division of French telecommunications giant Vivendi SA, had threatened to sue YouTube for copyright infringement, saying it was a hub for pirated music videos, but later reached a licensing deal with them last year.
Despite Viacom's problems with YouTube, the company's MTV Networks division reached a licensing deal last year with Google that allows the search company's video service to use clips from MTV and its sibling networks under a revenue-sharing agreement.
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- SharnCedar has obviously been spending too much time studying for her Bat Mitzvah and hasn't taken the time to look at YouTube.
Wake up, Shuggelah - and open your tired eyes. - Reply to this comment
- "the hugely popular site. "
Is YouTube that popular, or is this more hype. Isn't it the same 13 kids on the site, kids with no money or prospects anyway.
When something new appears, there is always a lot of hype. When the transister radio came out, you had all this hype about it, kids were building model radio sets. well, they are not doing it now, they are hyping around YouTube, trying to catch the feeling of being important and current.
I wouldn't say transister radios is a big growth boom business today. How much of Google and YouTube is real business, and how much hype. - Reply to this comment
- Oh, of course Viacom is going after YouTube. They can't have more exposure to audiences without their executives pulling the puppet strings.
It's called corporate ego. Whether or not the 'infringement' affects their 'capital', they simply can't allow free content, regardless of the good PR it generates. - Reply to this comment
- Hey Drew, I want to see them sue youtube.com for $100,000.00 per video like they do 6 year old kids and 80 year old grandmas for downloading one of their freakin worthless songs.
- Reply to this comment
- Tsk tsk Viacom.
Many of your biggest moneymakers LOVE YouTube:
* The Daily Show
* The Colbert Report
* South Park
You've lost sight of the big picture here and will regret this decision. This is a bad move made by short-sighted people.
:-( - Reply to this comment
- youtube is worthless without copyright infringement, meanwhile they're sueing 6 year old kids and 80 year old grannies for downloading a freakin song.
- Reply to this comment




