Just got a notice regarding twitch streaming, not sure what the future
of this venue is in the context of DJ sets. Live sets [of original
material] would still be doable. I guess it makes sense that this was
coming. Many DJ's have been flooding to twitch as a venue to broadcast
their live sets for exactly this reason.

----------------------

We are committed to being more transparent with you about DMCA. We
recently received a batch of DMCA takedown notifications with about
1,000 individual claims from music publishers. All of the claims are
for VODs, and the vast majority target streamers listening to
background music while playing video games or IRL streaming. Based on
the number of claims, we believe these rights holders used automated
tools to scan and identify copyrighted music in creators’ VODs and
Clips, which means that they will likely send further notices. We are
actively speaking with music labels about solutions that could work
for creators as well as rights holders. This is our first such contact
from the music publishing industry (there can be several owners for a
single piece of music), and we are disappointed they decided to send
takedowns when we are willing and ready to speak to them about
solutions.

Protecting Your Channel
While the vast majority of you don’t include unauthorized background
music in your livestreams, this recent batch suggests that some of you
still do. The only way to protect yourself from DMCA notifications is
to not stream music - or other copyrighted material - you do not have
rights to. If you know you have unauthorized music or other
copyrighted material in your past VODs or Clips, we strongly recommend
that you permanently delete anything that contains that material. For
your remaining VODs, we recommend you use the “unpublish all” feature
and review any content for unauthorized music or other copyrighted
material. If you believe your content has been misidentified or taken
down by mistake, you can submit a counter-notification (see our DMCA
Guidelines for requirements) or request a retraction from the
copyright owner directly. For more information about what you can do
to protect your channel please reference these resources including
Creator Camp sessions, Help Articles and FAQs, and an overview blog
post to supplement our Terms of Service, Community Guidelines, and
separate Music Guidelines.

What Twitch is Doing
For our part, we are continuing to help creators minimize the amount
of material that may infringe others’ copyrights. That includes
educating creators and providing resources to understand the rules and
risks concerning the use of music on Twitch as well as building new
product features (such as the ability to unpublish VODs, view your
strike count, strike notifications in the Creator Dashboard,
multi-track audio support for OBS and more), investing in proactive
detection and muting, and working with rights holders on longer-term
solutions.

We know you may have questions about our conversations with music
rights holders. These conversations are active and ongoing, and we
continue to work with them to establish potential approaches that
would be appropriate for the Twitch service and our entire community.
When we have progress to discuss in that area, we will share it with
you.

Reply via email to