Members of Congress Question Google CEO about YouTube’s Content-ID System

YouTube’s Content ID system aims to protect copyright holders, but for now, it’s not open to everyone. This limited availability of one of the largest copyright enforcement tools has raised questions among several US members of Congress. They question Google CEO Sundar Pichai on several Content ID issues, hoping the company will open it up to more rightsholders.

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To protect copyright holders, YouTube uses an advanced piracy recognition system that flags and disables videos that are used without permission.

This system, known as Content ID, works well most of the time, but it’s not perfect. In recent years it’s been heavily criticized by YouTube users and rightsholders alike.

YouTubers, for example, have repeatedly complained that their content has been inaccurately claimed. On the other side, there are tens of thousands of copyright holders who would love to join the Content ID program but are not allowed to.

For now, YouTube’s Content ID system is limited to a few thousand participants. These are claimants which own the exclusive rights to a “substantial body of material” that is “frequently uploaded” by YouTube users. In other words, not the average indie creator.

This exclusivity is a thorn in the side of smaller artists, who instead have to manually go through YouTube to find infringing content. While that’s no different from any other site on the Internet, they feel left out and disadvantaged by the video streaming site.

This issue hasn’t gone unnoticed by US lawmakers. This week, a group of eight members of Congress, including Sen. Marcha Blackburn, Sen. Christopher Coons, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, and Rep. Adam Schiff, invited Google CEO Sundar Pichai to a roundtable discussion specifically about Content ID.

The members explain that they are quite content with Google’s copyright enforcement efforts, but they are also concerned that smaller content creators are being left out.

“We are concerned that copyright holders with smaller catalogs of works cannot utilize Content ID, making it more difficult or impossible for them to effectively protect their copyrighted works from infringement and, ultimately, impacting their livelihoods,” they write.

The lawmakers stress that many copyright holders have been denied access to Content ID. While they are still able to take infringing content down manually, they have to do more work than some larger competitors and with fewer resources.

“We have heard from copyright holders who have been denied access to Content ID tools, and as a result, are at a significant disadvantage to prevent the repeated uploading of content that they have previously identified as infringing,” the letter explains.

“They are left with the choice of spending hours each week seeking out and sending notices about the same copyrighted works, or allowing their intellectual property to be misappropriated,” they add.

The Congress members hope to obtain more insight into the matter during a roundtable, where representatives of the creative community will also be present. They’ve prepared a set of questions for Google’s CEO, which they hope to have answered.

Among other things, the members want to know how the Content ID system works, what type of rightsholders are able to join now, whether Google plans to open it up to more rightsholders, and if it will be expanded to other Google services, such as Blogger.

The entire roundtable appears to be limited to the perspective of external rightsholders. There is no mention of the many inaccurate claiming requests YouTubers (who are also content creators) complain about, nor is Content ID abuse on the agenda.

The goal of the roundtable is clear. The Congress members want YouTube’s Content ID system to be available to a wider range of rightsholders, as clearly indicated in their closing words.

“Again, we appreciate the efforts that you have made to combat distribution of infringing content on YouTube. Given its apparent benefits to rights holders, we hope that you will consider making Content ID and the benefits it provides available to a larger category of content creators.”

A copy of the letter the Members of Congress sent to Google CEO Sundar Pichai is available here (pdf), via IPWatchdog.

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Hydride predicted to be superconductive at room temperature

Room temperature superconductive hydride predicted… at 250GPa.

Electrons pair up by exchanging phonons in a superconductor.

Enlarge / Electrons pair up by exchanging phonons in a superconductor.

Superconductivity came with a lot of unfulfilled promises. Power without loss? Sign me up. Superconducting magnetic resonance imaging magnets? They're, ahem, cool. And CERN couldn’t operate without buckets of liquid helium to keep its magnets superconducting.

But those examples highlight the problem: pretty much all practical applications for superconductivity require liquid helium temperatures. The search for high-temperature superconductors has taken us to many weird places, including strange substances that only form at high pressure. Now we can add another of those substances to the list: a hydride that only forms under protest. Once formed, though, it may be a superconductor way above room temperature.

Why are we still looking for superconductors?

The search for superconductors goes on because current superconductors come with a number of challenges. If the magnetic field is too strong, superconductivity vanishes. Likewise, if the current density exceeds a certain limit, the resistance appears, which heats the conductor, leading to rapid—and rapidly expanding—failure. And the liquid helium needed to keep things cool in the first place is expensive.

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Liveblog: All the news from Apple’s “By Innovation Only” iPhone event

Ars is on the scene in Cupertino for Apple’s latest reveal.

Stylized Apple logo.

Enlarge / This image accompanied invitations Apple sent to the press for the September 10 event. (credit: Apple)

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CUPERTINO, Calif.—At 10:00am Pacific time on Tuesday, September 10, Apple executives will take the stage in the Steve Jobs Theater at Apple's headquarters to announce a slate of new products. Those products will likely include 2019's new iPhone models, which are rumored to have greatly improved cameras and a number of incremental improvements over 2018's iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR. Ars Technica will be in attendance at the event, and we'll be liveblogging the proceedings right here.

Several of Apple's plans for this fall have leaked or appeared in reliable reports in the past several weeks, though it is not certain exactly which ones will come to pass at this event as opposed to a later one. However, Apple has over the past few years settled into a schedule of focusing annual events around this time in September on its two flagship mobile products: the iPhone and the Apple Watch.

The company also intends to introduce a new MacBook Pro and an updated iPad Pro at some point before the end of the year, and it has already announced plans to bring the totally overhauled Mac Pro and its accompanying Pro Display XDR to market in 2019. We don't expect the focus to be on those products at this event—they were detailed at the company's developer conference in June—but we do expect Apple to tell attendees its planned release dates for 2019's major operating system updates, iOS 13 and macOS Catalina.

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Razer Blade Stealth 13 im Hands-on: Ultrabook oder Gaming-Notebook?

Das Razer Blade Stealth war lange Zeit eigentlich nur zum Schreiben geeignet. Die neue Version des 13-Zoll-Modells soll das ändern – mit einer Nvidia Geforce GTX 1650. Golem.de schaut sich das schicke Notebook an. (Razer, Notebook)

Das Razer Blade Stealth war lange Zeit eigentlich nur zum Schreiben geeignet. Die neue Version des 13-Zoll-Modells soll das ändern - mit einer Nvidia Geforce GTX 1650. Golem.de schaut sich das schicke Notebook an. (Razer, Notebook)

GPD developing a gaming tablet with detachable controllers

The company behind the GPD Win, Pocket, and MicroPC line of handheld computers may be planning to launch a Nintendo Switch-like device. A set of images posted to a Chinese forum show what appears to be a small tablet designed to work with a set of deta…

The company behind the GPD Win, Pocket, and MicroPC line of handheld computers may be planning to launch a Nintendo Switch-like device. A set of images posted to a Chinese forum show what appears to be a small tablet designed to work with a set of detachable controllers that slide into slots on the sides. […]

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Galaxy A90 5G: Samsung präsentiert 5G-Smartphone für 750 Euro

Bisher gibt es von Samsung nur 5G-Smartphones aus der absoluten Topreihe, auf der Ifa hat der Hersteller mit dem Galaxy A90 5G auch ein etwas günstigeres Gerät vorgestellt. Die Ausstattung ist hochwertig, das Smartphone soll noch im September 2019 in …

Bisher gibt es von Samsung nur 5G-Smartphones aus der absoluten Topreihe, auf der Ifa hat der Hersteller mit dem Galaxy A90 5G auch ein etwas günstigeres Gerät vorgestellt. Die Ausstattung ist hochwertig, das Smartphone soll noch im September 2019 in den Handel kommen. (Ifa 2019, Smartphone)

Facebook on the hook as states launch competition, privacy probe

States action follows a whole big bunch of federal and international regulators.

Facebook on the hook as states launch competition, privacy probe

Enlarge (credit: NurPhoto | Getty Images)

A coalition of states attorneys general is joining together to launch yet another antitrust probe of Facebook, joining several investigations already in progress.

"I’m launching an investigation into Facebook to determine whether their actions endangered consumer data, reduced the quality of consumers’ choices, or increased the price of advertising," New York attorney general Letitia James said this morning. "The largest social media platform in the world must follow the law."

The bipartisan group will determine whether Facebook used its market dominance to unfairly stifle competition. It will also examine if Facebook took anticompetitive actions that harm consumer data and privacy, "the quality of consumers' choices," and pricing in the digital advertising market. Attorneys general for Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, and the District of Columbia are also participating, James's office said in a press release.

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Daily Deals (9-06-2019)

Eero was one of the first players in the mesh WiFi space, and while there’s a lot of competition these days, the company (now owned by Amazon) continues to offer a line of well-regarded whole-home WiFi solutions. They ain’t cheap though. Li…

Eero was one of the first players in the mesh WiFi space, and while there’s a lot of competition these days, the company (now owned by Amazon) continues to offer a line of well-regarded whole-home WiFi solutions. They ain’t cheap though. List prices start at $299 for a 2-piece system. Amazon’s currently running a sale […]

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