This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Darlene Antonelli, MA. Darlene Antonelli is a Technology Writer and Editor for wikiHow. Darlene has experience teaching college courses, writing technology-related articles, and working hands-on in the technology field. She earned an MA in Writing from Rowan University in 2012 and wrote her thesis on online communities and the personalities curated in such communities.
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If YouTube detects copyrighted content in a video you post, the video may be demonetized, muted, and/or deleted. Breaking YouTube's copyright rules 3 times may even result in your channel being suspended or terminated. This wikiHow teaches you how to upload a video containing copyrighted content in a way that complies with YouTube's Fair Use guidelines. You can read more about YouTube's Fair Use policies at https://www.youtube.com/about/copyright/fair-use.
Steps
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1Transform the copyrighted material in your video. To avoid a copyright strike and to put your uploaded video under the umbrella of fair use, you'll want to modify it enough that it creates a very different meaning than its original purpose.[1] Here are some examples:
- Combine or arrange copyrighted images and video to create a different version of a story, such as a new movie ending or sequence of events, with custom music and voiceovers.
- Record your own cover versions of songs that sound a bit different than the original. Mashups and remixes are also great ways to use clips of copyrighted material in creative ways, but make sure the finished project isn't too similar to the original.[2]
- Shoot a parody of an existing video using different symbols, characters, and ideas.
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2Make the content educational. When a judge evaluates a copyright infringement claim, they'll look at is whether the material is intended for commercial or educational purposes.[3] Keep the focus on providing an alternative take on that material and you'll have more luck avoiding the flaggers.Advertisement
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4Ask the content owner for permission. It's not enough to include a disclaimer or attribution to the original owner. If you're flagged by YouTube, you'll need proof from the copyright owner that you have the proper rights to use their content. You'll need written proof to fight off YouTube and/or the law. If a license is available for the copyrighted material, purchase a license from the creator.
Community Q&A
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QuestionIf I edit the video from movie and change music background, does it show the copyright?TorpiTop AnswererYes, that still breaks the copyright of the movie ("transformative" works must do much more than just copy something and change the background music) and also of the music you used.
References
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/about/copyright/fair-use/#yt-copyright-four-factors
- ↑ https://youtu.be/6_WWRJ71Hqo?t=403
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/about/copyright/fair-use/#yt-copyright-protection
- ↑ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
- ↑ https://www.smartcopying.edu.au/open-education/creative-commons/creative-commons-information-pack-for-teachers-and-students/how-to-find-creative-commons-licensed-materials
About This Article
1. Transform the copyrighted material in your video.
2. Use the copyrighted material out of context.
3. Use Creative Commons licensed material.
4. Attribute your copyrighted video.