Small Problem

Kyrie

Creator.
I have a show where I look at movie theories, and the such and I NEED to be able to have clips from films in my show.. How do I do this without getting a copyright strike?
 
I'm no expert on this subject but people do this type of thing all the time usually using short clips I am fairly certain they claim it under fair use but it reall all depends on how long the clip is and if you are making money off of it
 
You must verify but using part of a trailer should be OK.
For the rest they just have to rely on the benevolence of the movie creators.
Their clips could be taken down at any moment.
So they just take the risk.
Also the huge YouTube creators can rely on the help of their networks for fixing the copyright issues but even they can't always help.
 
I did a movie review before, using clips of the trailers. I think it's best to flip the video and then just try to zoom in some of the parts so that it can avoid youtube's automatic claims. I've been claimed but disputed it, so the vid is still up with no copyright strikes.

But you know, you play a dangerous game with movies. All them copyrights :\
 
i think you will be okay once the clip is under 20 seconds long, I believe. Perhaps alter the pitch of the trailers audio slightly too!
 
I have a show where I look at movie theories, and the such and I NEED to be able to have clips from films in my show.. How do I do this without getting a copyright strike?
There are a couple of ways...

1. Look up 'Fair Use'.

2. Contact the publishers/or company of the film(s) you'll be using in the respective video.

3. Mirror, change the tempo, speed, or audio to the clip a bit.

4. Use about 10-20 seconds of the film clips.

But if you use 3 or 4 you should be fine.
 
I'd be very careful with movie clips. Using 'Fair Use' is walking a very fine line, especially if you wanted to monetize it. YouTube can be very strict when it comes to non-licensed/authorized copyrighted material.
 
Look up nostalgia critic that's how much I use
The Critic often makes his videos and post them up on blip (for monetization) rather than youtube. Though his videos does get upload on youtube, I don't know about whether they get copyrights or not.
 
The Critic often makes his videos and post them up on blip (for monetization) rather than youtube. Though his videos does get upload on youtube, I don't know about whether they get copyrights or not.

Exactly, and I'm using DM now.
 
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