In 2015, when Australian music technologist Sebastian Tomczak uploaded a 10-hour YouTube video featuring nothing but white noise, he was, in his own words, “interested in listening to continuous sounds of various types, and how our perception of these kinds of sounds and our attention changes over longer periods.”
Instead, Tomczak learned a lesson in internet-age distribution. Even though his clip was composed entirely of indeterminable, staticky sound, it has received five Content ID claims since its initial upload date, the last of which arrived on January 5.
Some of the claims accuse Tomczak of infringing upon white noise videos that are designed to help people fall asleep. All five claimants have chosen to monetize Tomczak’s video rather that requesting a takedown of it, so the university professor’s white noise clip is now generating revenue for other people.
Though Tomczak’s tangle with Content ID lends more credence to the imperfect nature of YouTube’s rights management system, the technologist isn’t worried about feeling any effects on his channel. “I’ve had quite a few copyright claims against me, usually based on cases where I’ve made long mixes of work, or longer pieces,” he told Torrent Freak. “Usually I don’t take them too seriously.”
Tomczak’s channel hosts multiple ten-hour videos. One of his clips, for example, is a perfect fifth interval stretching across a massive expanse of time. As Torrent Freak notes, that video has no copyright claims against it.
Later this month, thousands of people from across the advertising industry will pour into Cannes,…
Search traffic, restaurant discovery, travel booking, fintech . . . What isn't TikTok into? Add…
Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…
New York City's iconic Tribeca Festival returns for its 25th anniversary this year--and with it…
Airbnb wants in on the creator craze. The company is most recognized for offering hotel…
With the World Cup fast approaching, TikTok is leveraging its position as FIFA's first ever…