Thursday , November 21 2024
Breaking News

YouTube Content Ownership Assessment Exam Answers

  • Copyright does not apply since the cover song is not fixed.
  • Is considered a reproduction and permission may be needed from the original content creator before it is used.
  • Copyright applies to new music videos but not audio recordings of covers.
  • Is considered a collective work and it’s unnecessary to request permission from the content creator.
  • A decrease in views.
  • A dip in advertising revenue.
  • A sharp uptick in overall revenue.
  • An increase in watch time.
  • YouTube applies the default upload policy to videos that users upload to their channels, which produces better Content ID matches.
  • If you don’t select a default policy, YouTube uses the predefined policy Block Everywhere.
  • YouTube applies the default upload policy to videos that you upload to your channels, which peeds up the setup process.
  • When you have no match policy, your default upload policy is applied as the match policy.
  • Partner manager escalation
  • Copyright notification web form
  • Creator review board
  • YouTube Copyright School
  • Release the claim
  • Reinstate the claim
  • Takedown
  • Release the claim and exclude the segment from matching
  • Trademark
  • Collective work
  • Derivative work
  • Compilation
  • No technical expertise required
  • High video quality
  • Offline disk import
  • Ease of scalability
  • When an ad is placed on the video
  • As it is uploaded and at intervals later on
  • After it has received more than 1000 views
  • Only when it is first uploaded and published
  • Duplicate your asset so the other can assign ownership to the content
  • Whitelist the other party’s channel.
  • Ask the other party to enter your channel ID in their asset metadata
  • Turn off “Enable Content ID matching”.
  • Content ID is only available to channels with >1 million subscribers.
  • Content ID allows viewers to flag harmful or dangerous content.
  • Content ID scans all uploads and removes portions that infringe copyright.
  • Content ID enables rights holders to block, track, or monetize uploads that use copyrighted content
  • They have become a YouTube partner, and need to manage channel revenue.
  • They manage a large, or multi-channel, content repository.
  • Joining a multi-channel network, especially if it’s an international one.
  • They produce parody or cover videos, and want to avoid copyright takedowns.
  • It’s designated as a violation of YouTube’s Terms of Service.
  • It’s flagged for a copyright takedown notice.
  • It’s marked as unavailable for viewing in the territories specified by the copyright owner.
  • It’s deleted from the site within 10 business days.
  • Aspera Dropbox
  • Web upload interface in Creator Studio
  • YouTube API
  • Secure File Transfer Protocol (SFTP)
  • Device, views, playback location.
  • Language, watch time, demographics.
  • Geography, subtitles, revenue.
  • Geography, device, and language.
  • Ensure your asset ID changes with your ownership
  • Reduce asset ownership conflicts because you no longer have the rights and cannot apply your policies in those territories
  • Establish new rights holder access to previously expired claims from the previous content owner
  • Enable multiple parties to share ownership of a web asset in the same territory
  • Creates referral lists of people who can advocate on your behalf.
  • Provides legal advice during a dispute about uploaded content.
  • Builds technologies such as Content ID to help manage rights at scale.
  • Uses a team of reviewers to manually inspect all content uploaded.
  • Container for information about a piece of intellectual property
  • Policy applied to a video, music, or composition
  • Similar to a video that’s uploaded to a channel
  • Link between a video on YouTube and its monetary value
  • Content ID mutes the audio portion.
  • The asset type is converted to Web.
  • This may lead to erroneous claims.
  • Content ID deletes the reference.
  • Vary by country
  • Common standards are updated annually
  • Same across all countries
  • Laws follow either EU or US precedent
  • To verify the content complies with Content ID guidelines
  • To prevent copyright strikes
  • To respond to disputes from another content owner
  • To resolve reference overlaps
  • Create digital fingerprints and set permissions
  • Validate your assets with Video Manager
  • File claims when notified of matching content
  • Upload reference files and enable Content ID
  • After the video has received at least 100 views
  • Before you upload your video to YouTube
  • When you monetize your video
  • While the video is being transcoded for use
  • The claim moves to the “Released Claims” queue
  • The claim is released and the policy changes to “Track”
  • The claim becomes pending until the user responds
  • The claim is set to inactive and your match policy isn’t applied
  • After the creative work is communicated to another party by any means
  • After it has been approved by a local copyright attorney
  • When the creative work is registered with the international copyright office
  • As soon as the creative work is fixed in a tangible medium of expression
  • YouTube automatically selects appropriate ad types.
  • You specify ad types when you create your channel.
  • You specify ad types using advertising settings, which are distinct from a rights policy.
  • You set ad types in the Monetize section of Content ID.
  • May be considered fair use to use a very short movie clip to support commentary about the plot or characters.
  • Video footage may be used as long as the sound is disabled.
  • Prevents any footage from being shown without written consent from the actors who have dialogue.
  • Allows a review to add as many pieces of footage from the movie if it’s listed as a movie review.
  • Exclude the segment with the movie clip.
  • Add ownership on BritFlix’s asset.
  • Use the reference but agree to split the ad revenue.
  • Deactivate the reference file in the UK.
  • Restore
  • Reinstate
  • Takedown
  • Release
  • Playback locations.
  • Geography.
  • Devices.
  • Traffic sources.
  • Reinstate the claim and change your match policy to Block
  • Release the claim and deactivate the reference file
  • Takedown
  • Release the claim and exclude the matched portion from your reference to prevent future matches
  • To quickly identify statistical outliers.
  • To hide non-relevant information.
  • To sort it by degree of importance.
  • To aggregate data into useful chunks
  • The video is viewable only on YouTube (embeds and other playbacks are disabled).
  • The video is unavailable for viewing but retains a unique URL.
  • The video is unavailable for viewing and the uploader automatically receives a copyright strike.
  • The video is available for viewing but the uploader receives a copyright strike.
  • A legal process to prove ownership of intellectual property
  • Link between a video uploaded to YouTube and an asset
  • Policy that enables monetization for all videos
  • A container for information about a piece of intellectual property
  • Short phrase
  • Names
  • Literary work
  • Titles
  • 3rd party arbitrator for copyright claims
  • The person who uploaded the video
  • It’s not possible to retract the notice
  • The one that originally submitted the notice
  • They can monetize user-generated content that uses copyrighted material.
  • They can eradicate pirate sites from the internet.
  • They can quickly remove up to 100 videos with the Copyright takedown webform.
  • They can issue a “copyright strike” whenever the automated system flags a potential violation.
  • When performing a cover song, you still need to be sure that you have the permission of the songwriter or composer.
  • This is protected by fair use, so you don’t need permission from the original content creator.
  • You may want to change some of the lyrics in your cover song, so you would avoid copyright issues.
  • A cover song is considered a transformative work, so you don’t need permission from the original content creator.
  • Disable monetization on all channels
  • Maintain proper internal controls and educate your channels
  • Add a Creative Commons license for all uploaded content
  • Mark all videos uploaded as original content
  • Set of rules that specify whether to monetize, track, or block a claimed video
  • YouTube’s legal framework for managing copyright infringement.
  • Instructions for which ad formats should appear on videos.
  • Similar to a license. It gives permission for others to reuse content on the Internet.
  • These have not been defined under current copyright law, so it’s unclear.
  • These can be considered derivative works under the law, and you may need permission from the original content creators.
  • These are considered original works, so you would own the copyright.
  • These are protected by fair use, so you don’t need permission from the original content creators.
  • 60 days
  • 30 days
  • 45 days
  • Never
  • Claim becomes active again and partner policy is applied to the video.
  • Upheld but the claim is set to “none”.
  • The user who uploaded the content receives notice for violating terms of use.
  • Routed to third-party review board for manual investigation.
  • MPAA award
  • IMDB reference
  • Movie trailer
  • Web
  • Abstract ideas
  • Photos
  • Facts
  • Methods of operation
  • Animation
  • Audio content without video
  • Public domain content
  • Files longer than 45 minutes
  • Any music can be used in videos according to the terms specified.
  • Music may be used for non-monetized videos only.
  • Songs can be used if you pay the owner royalties.
  • Only sound effects may be used, but not songs.
  • Only the partner that initially added ownership to the asset will receive the worldwide revenue.
  • Only the partner that most recently added ownership will receive the worldwide revenue.
  • Asset will go into a state of conflict. Both partners’ monetization policies will not apply in the overlapping territories.
  • Asset will monetize on behalf of both partners. Revenue will be equally split.
  • Upload the entire episode as a reference file, because she has a license to use the viral cat videos.
  • Not upload the video as a reference file at all, because interview footage is not copyrightable.
  • Not upload the video as a reference file at all, because it contains third-party content.
  • Upload only the 10-minute interview as a reference file, because the partner does not own the viral videos exclusively.
  • These are now claimed by both partners.
  • These go to Partner B.
  • These go to Partner A.
  • These will now be unclaimed.
  • Device, views, playback location.
  • Geography, demographics, and watch time.
  • Comments, views, watch time.
  • Views, subtitles, revenue.
  • Maintain a subscriber count above 100,000.
  • Deliver videos in HD resolution.
  • Upload more than 100 videos per month.
  • Provide an SSH Key to your account manager.
  • Notify partner manager of reporting preferences
  • This can’t happen: the full Analytics suite is available to everyone who’s signed in.
  • Invite users to be content owners via email.
  • Exclude revenue data from a user role.
  • Deactivate the reference file for 30 days and suspend matching
  • Stop claiming new user-uploaded content that matches the reference file
  • Continue matching new user uploads, but change the match policy to track
  • Release all prior claims made against the reference file, but continue matching new user uploads
  • YouTube API
  • Aspera Dropbox
  • Secure File Transfer Protocol (SFTP)
  • Web upload interface in Creator Studio
  • Deliver reference material to YouTube that reflects content ownership
  • Convert material into proprietary video format
  • Flag uploaded content that may infringe on rights
  • View and manage claim settings
  • Usage Policy = Track, Match Policy = none
  • Usage Policy = Track, Match Policy = Monetize
  • Usage Policy = Monetize, Match Policy = Track
  • This requires a custom policy
  • Channel trailer
  • Comedy improv video
  • Animated TV show
  • Video title
  • Remove your asset ownership for Canada
  • Download the Ownership report and filter by Canada
  • Contact the other asset owner to request an update
  • Edit your ownership if you plan to monetize
  • Watch time.
  • Devices.
  • Comments.
  • Demographics
  • Content released under open license
  • Content with exclusive territorial rights
  • Third-party clips under fair use/dealing principles
  • Public domain recordings
  • Playback locations.
  • Traffic sources.
  • Devices.
  • Geography.
  • Change video privacy setting from Private to Public
  • All partner-uploaded videos automatically become references
  • Claim the video and enable Content ID matches
  • Select a usage policy
  • Your video will be made unavailable in countries where you don’t own the asset.
  • Your video will become Unlisted on your channel.
  • All user videos claimed against the asset will be made unavailable in areas where you don’t own the asset.
  • Other parties are unable to add ownership to your asset in territories that you don’t own it.
  • The video is unavailable for viewing and the uploader automatically receives a copyright strike.
  • The video is available for viewing but the uploader receives a copyright strike.
  • The video is viewable only on YouTube (embeds and other playbacks are disabled).
  • The video is unavailable for viewing but retains a unique URL.
  • Reference Material, Ad Formats
  • Intellectual Property, Copyright Notices
  • Ownership, Claims, Videos
  • Metadata, Ownership, Reference Material, Match Policy
  • Movie
  • Music video
  • Composition
  • Sound recording
  • The user and partner must mediate the claim outside of the automated Content ID system.
  • The partner must decide whether to release the claim or issue a legal takedown notice.
  • The partner can choose to reinstate the claim again to assert their rights.
  • The user automatically receives permission to use the video.
  • May lead to a policy dispute with another content owner
  • May prevent you from controlling and monetizing reuploads of your copyrighted material
  • May cause your channel to receive a partner strike
  • May prevent you from adjusting video privacy settings
  • Campaigns
  • Reference tags
  • Asset labels
  • Custom policies
  • It gives you advice about your specific video.
  • It connects you to the person who uploaded the infringing video.
  • It offers resources on managing copyright and answers to frequently asked questions.
  • It contains tools for you to instantly remove videos that violate any laws.
  • A series of reactions to other people’s videos
  • A video of you at home offering beauty tips
  • Commentary and critique of copyrighted works
  • A video made entirely from a compilation of funny clips from YouTube videos found on other channels
  • The video is removed from search results but still published.
  • A legal takedown notice is issued against this video.
  • The request is forwarded to the partner manager for evaluation.
  • The claim is released.
  • Your attorney must submit a formal request to a court.
  • Anyone can flag a video, and a copyright takedown notice will be sent to the person who uploaded the video.
  • As the copyright owner or authorized agent, you must submit a fully completed notification of copyright infringement.
  • Person who uploaded the video must admit to using copyrighted material.
  • Clear any pending claims you have in your account before adding new content.
  • Use the song freely because it has automatically entered the public domain.
  • Estimate the number of other videos that may also use this song in their tribute videos.
  • Request permission to use it since the song is likely still covered by copyright protection.
  • Performance data is excluded from YouTube Analytics reports.
  • The claim is released and an exclusion on the underlying reference file is created.
  • Underlying reference data is removed to prevent future claims.
  • A legal takedown notice is issued to the user who uploaded the content.
  • Fair use
  • Privacy
  • Patent
  • Trademark
  • Reuse per terms of the license
  • Only use for non-commercial works
  • Claim as original work
  • Use without attribution
  • Usage Policy = Track, Match Policy = Monetize
  • Usage Policy = Monetize, Match Policy = Block
  • Usage Policy = Block, Match Policy = Monetize
  • Usage Policy = none, Match Policy = Block
  • The video is restored but cannot be monetized.
  • The copyright strike is removed from the user’s account.
  • The claimant is prevented from filing future copyright takedowns.
  • The copyright strike changes to “pending”? status.
  • The first partner will immediately lose claims on the content and should remove the overlapping portion from their reference.
  • User videos that match only the excluded portion will be claimed by both partners, but excluded from the other partner’s list of claims.
  • User videos that match only the excluded portion will be given to the second partner who selected “Assert Exclusive Rights”.
  • The first partner will be asked to review the overlap, and either assert exclusive rights or exclude the overlapping segment from their reference.
  • United States Copyright Office
  • An attorney
  • YouTube Copyright Center
  • An account manager
  • To ensure accurate claiming of user videos so you can control your content
  • To identify the languages for which you have ownership
  • References are rejected if they contain third-party content
  • You cannot modify your reference after it’s created
  • Don’t assign ownership until the partner has secured worldwide rights.
  • Set ownership on the asset to all countries. Set a match policy of block outside of Spain
  • Set ownership on the asset to Spain, and set block outside ownership on the claim.
  • Set ownership on the asset to Spain only.
  • Send an email to the person who uploaded the video
  • Nothing, because it’s freedom of expression
  • Submit a copyright takedown request
  • Report the video using the Flag action
  • Compare the video to other ones on the uploader’s channel.
  • Submit the video to the automated system for evaluation.
  • Consider the criteria for fair use (or fair dealing), including whether the video is a parody or critique with social value.
  • Calculate the percentage of copyrighted content to make sure it’s less than 25%.
  • Appeal all claims made against the content you upload
  • Include less than 10 seconds of other people’s work
  • Only upload original content
  • Delete videos after you receive a copyright notice
  • Assigns a badge to the uploader’s channel home page to identify them as an abusive actor.
  • On a quarterly basis, publishes and shares a list of accounts that have been uploading copyrighted material.
  • Removes the video from the site and issues a copyright strike to the uploader.
  • Immediately shares information about the case with local law enforcement agencies for prosecution.
  • Explicit permission from the copyright owner
  • Link to the original work in the metadata
  • On-screen reference at the beginning of the video
  • Full name of the owner listed in the final credits
  • Nothing happens since a claim may indefinitely sit in the queue.
  • Claim is released.
  • Claim is extended for 30 more days.
  • Claim defaults to Block and then can be appealed.
  • They can monetize user-generated content that uses copyrighted material.
  • They can issue a “copyright strike” whenever the automated system flags a potential violation.
  • They can quickly remove up to 100 videos with the Copyright takedown webform.
  • They can eradicate pirate sites from the internet.
  • The claim is released but may be reinstated after 30 days.
  • The match policy is applied unless it is Monetize.
  • The corresponding reference file is classified as pending.
  • The claim is routed for review by the content owner.
  • Name of the original creator included on screen
  • Addition of a link to original content in the metadata
  • Inclusion of a disclaimer to the subsequent use
  • Purpose and character of the use
  • As long as the original work is referenced in the video, no other permission is needed
  • Owner of the channel where the video was uploaded
  • After a video has been uploaded to YouTube, Content ID grants permission
  • Copyright owner of original video and all works contained within it
  • Name of the original creator included on screen
  • Addition of a link to original content in the metadata
  • Inclusion of a disclaimer to the subsequent use
  • Purpose and character of the use
  • Click “Validate”? button.
  • Upload metadata files through UI.
  • Drag and drop media files.
  • Process the package.
  • Watch Time minutes added to their total account.
  • Views from the video added on to their own uploaded version of the video.
  • Analytics data on the video.
  • Revenue from ads shown on the video.
  • Warning of possible account termination if copyright abuse continues
  • Instructions for contacting the copyright owner to obtain a license
  • Notice to mediate the dispute or face legal fines
  • A document to fill out to file an appeal    
  • These go to Partner B.
  • These are now claimed by both partners.
  • These go to Partner A.
  • These will now be unclaimed.

About Clear My Certification

Check Also

Certiprof Design Sprint Foundation Professional Certification Answers

Enroll Now : Certiprof Design Sprint Foundation Professional Certification In today’s fast-paced business environment, the …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *