When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. YouTube copyright issues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YouTube_copyright_issues

    He originally appealed but was denied as it is not YouTube, but the user claiming the content who has the final say over the appeal. He messaged YouTube to appeal, but YouTube said that they do not mediate copyright claims. [38] The claim was later removed, with Google terminating the claimant's YouTube channel and multi-channel network. [39]

  3. YouTube copyright strike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YouTube_copyright_strike

    However, if a YouTube user accumulates three copyright strikes within those 90 days, YouTube terminates that user's YouTube channel, including any associated channels that the user have, removes all of their videos from that user's YouTube channel, and prohibits that user from creating another YouTube channel. [1] [3] YouTube assigns strikes ...

  4. Viacom International Inc. v. YouTube, Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viacom_International_Inc...

    The complaint stated that over 150,000 unauthorized clips of Viacom's programming, including episodes of many popular television shows, had been made available on YouTube, and that these clips had collectively been viewed 1.5 billion times. [6]

  5. YouTube suspensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YouTube_suspensions

    Kim Kardashian’s eight-year-old-son Saint West’s YouTube channel being deleted after he shared a couple of anti-Kamala Harris videos. [173] Kardashian had originally allowed her son to start his own YouTube channel in September after he signed an “extensive contract.” [174]

  6. List of YouTube features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_YouTube_features

    Since June 2007, YouTube's videos have been available for viewing on a range of Apple products. This required YouTube's content to be transcoded into Apple's preferred video standard, H.264, a process that took several months. YouTube videos can be viewed on devices including Apple TV, iPod Touch and the iPhone. [108]

  7. Wikipedia:Image use policy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Image_use_policy

    If an image requires consent, but consent cannot be obtained, there are several options. For example, identifying features can be blurred, pixelated, or obscured so that the person is no longer identifiable. Also, the picture may be re-taken at a different angle, perhaps so that the subject's face is not visible.

  8. Links to video content on YouTube or Google Video (or other, similar content aggregators) are allowed, provided the material linked to is not obviously infringing copyright, is relevant to the article, and is a primary source or a reliable and irreplaceable secondary source. This is the same policy as for any other external link.

  9. Rotten Tomatoes Movieclips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotten_Tomatoes_Movieclips

    Rotten Tomatoes Movieclips (formerly Movieclips and later Fandango Movieclips) is a company located in Venice, Los Angeles that offers streaming video of movie clips and trailers from such Hollywood film companies as Universal Pictures, Amazon MGM Studios, Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. (including content from subsidiaries New Line Cinema and Castle Rock Entertainment), Disney, Sony Pictures ...