I think the law gets a little complicated when you’ve essentially paid a full production company to produce a documentary and then they did not pay for copyrights. So perhaps it was the company that producing content for them that was at fault. But I know it had something to do with that.georgeoar394 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 09, 2023 10:01 pmThey must of had monetization on or something...you don't get copyright strikes unless you're making money off of it. I had the 2015/2014 downloaded and then had my hard drive wiped, rip. I know for a fact someone has the 2015 downloaded somewhereInsiderRoll wrote: ↑Fri Jun 09, 2023 5:45 pmUnfortunately that will be challenging to find out in the public. Tufts faced several lawsuits for copyright violations over their YouTube content particularly their documentaries and was forced to take everything down. They have since relaunched without use of copyrighted content, I don’t know if it went much past that but I believe it scared the administration to a degree.
A production company should have known better than to have used copyrighted music without permission.