YouTube will strike you if you stream those demos
category: general [glöplog]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kPUdhm2VE-o
This is not an oscilloscope demo, it is a music album (with oscilloscope visuals), so be careful. Original author will find your stream and wipe it. And you get a strike right before an event.
I think my own PeerTube instance will be useful. Going to create one.
This is not an oscilloscope demo, it is a music album (with oscilloscope visuals), so be careful. Original author will find your stream and wipe it. And you get a strike right before an event.
I think my own PeerTube instance will be useful. Going to create one.
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if you stream those demos
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not an oscilloscope demo
But this thing looks like a demo, it feels like a demo. I thought it was demo!
if everything that looks like a demo would be considered a demo, everything made with computers would be a demo. it needs to have been made within the concept of the demoscene to be considered a demo. rule of thumbs is if it was released at a demoparty or made by a previously releasing demoscener with specific intent of demoscene release (not for games or ads industry).
In general, stop uploading other people's stuff without permission.
Ok, I will keep it in mind
I thought Demoscene productions had to originate on computer hardware (retro and modern), not oscilloscopes?
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I thought Demoscene productions had to originate on computer hardware (retro and modern), not oscilloscopes?
'wild' demo comps are gonna blow your mind
that music album is sold, i got myself the vinyl of that
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I thought Demoscene productions had to originate on computer hardware (retro and modern), not oscilloscopes?
dude..
That's a funny semantic argument to have - technically speaking, the oscilloscope is just a display; the actual demo runs on whatever is providing the signal :)
YouTube has the most unclear policy on what gets a strike or not these days, wouldn't be surprised if it started striking down videos of demos just because xyz visual or music looks/sounds a bit like that new pop video clip that was released by a mainstream artist...
The Demoscene BADLY needs its own version of YouTube, solely dedicated to scene videos and the most accurate captures possible: matching resolutions, frame rates, everything. The costs of running such a website is probably prohibitive, however. Who would foot the bill?
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The Demoscene BADLY needs its own version of YouTube, solely dedicated to scene videos and the most accurate captures possible: matching resolutions, frame rates, everything. The costs of running such a website is probably prohibitive, however. Who would foot the bill?
let's see what the future holds - maybe being UNESCO cultural heritage helps in getting the funding for such a project at some point. But I guess the main issue would be (wo-)manpower anyways.
there is an attempt to something like this called the The Art Of Hard Coding...
The Art Of Hard Coding is just embedding YouTube, so no, not really.
I was under the impression that apart from embedding YouTube, they also hosted captures from several prods... Guess they did a pretty good job at hiding it! Yeah, the demoscene really needs a capped.tv service. :)
I agree. If something isn't fun anymore and gives you tons of headache it's better to be done with it. :)
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The Demoscene BADLY needs its own version of YouTube, solely dedicated to scene videos and the most accurate captures possible: matching resolutions, frame rates, everything. The costs of running such a website is probably prohibitive, however. Who would foot the bill?
That was capped.tv, presumably. It never really approached YouTube in popularity for demo captures :-)
found this the other day
https://demoarts.media/about/
https://demoarts.media/about/
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YouTube will strike you if you stream those demos
Not really, they're just using automated bots to report YouTube Creators to themselves, then potentially any registered Copyright holders if bots say audio matches. By doing so, they place themselves in the middle, put ads on your upload, and take the revenue from the views it generates.
It's exceedingly rare for someone to report their stolen audio. If they have registered their song (in another register...) just have to scan on upload.
The video is not stricken, and it may have been streamed but there's no indication, now it's a video that can be viewed anytime.
If someone wants to play any music they want, they can do so any time, by actually streaming. And then not leave the video up for the hungry bots.