Copyright
YouTube is designed to ensure that every player in our ecosystem can be successful.
This includes both protecting rightsholders and giving creators peace of mind so they can focus on producing original content.
YouTube is designed to ensure that every player in our ecosystem can be successful.
This includes both protecting rightsholders and giving creators peace of mind so they can focus on producing original content.
We’ve invested millions of dollars in developing a Copyright Management Suite that’s designed to balance the needs of our entire ecosystem — and we have clear rules when it comes to copyright.
YouTube has worked directly with rightsholders to ensure that copyrighted material on our platform is authorized, and we provide those robust tools to allow rightsholders to notify YouTube of alleged infringement, which we remove in accordance with the law. There are three main tools that make up our Copyright Management Suite:
Who is it for?
Available in more than 80 languages, all rightsholders have access to the webform, which we’ve built as a streamlined and efficient way to submit copyright removal requests.
**What does it do? **
Rightsholders enter a few details of their request, which is then reviewed by YouTube to see if it meets legal requirements for removing the reported content.
Rights holders have access to powerful features, including the ability to ask YouTube to automatically prevent copies of the removed content from being reuploaded.
Who’s it for?
It helps creators and rights holders protect their content by automatically finding videos that are the same or very similar to ones previously uploaded.
What does it do?
If a match is found, the creator or the rights holder is notified. She can then review the video that potentially reused their content and decide whether to request the video’s removal.
Who’s it for?
Rightsholders who have the most complex rights management needs and experience heavy reposting of copyrighted material, like movie studios and music labels.
What does it do?
Rightsholders can pre-determine rules for when content matches are found — choosing to block a whole video from being viewed, monetize the video by running ads against it, or track the video’s viewership stats.
The majority of copyright claims and removal requests on YouTube come from our automatic detection technology.
We empower uploaders to report wrongful takedown requests, and we measure how often creators push back against removals and Content ID claims in our Copyright Transparency Report.
Of the more than 1 billion Content ID claims made between July 2023 and December 2023, fewer than 1% have been disputed. Over 65% of those disputes succeeded, because claimants either voluntarily released the claim or did not respond within the 30-day window, resulting in the claim’s release. (Source)