I purchased a Home license to test the capabilities of VDJ before purchasing the Pro license. I used a Loopmasters sampler, such as kick, hat, perc, snare, topper, and bass, and created an 11-minute audio clip [a simple workshop]. After editing, I uploaded it to my YouTube channel, and a copyright claim appeared shortly after. I immediately appealed, concluding that I had only used the Virtual DJ content for my audio clip! In response, I received "The claimant disagreed with your dispute and reaffirmed their claim to your video." That's my question. How is this possible? I'm using the original program, using its content, and someone is still making a claim that this content is theirs? Have you encountered anything similar?
This is my audio clip content
Content found in 10:33 - 10:43 & 11:08 - 11:47 Tencent Music Entertainment Group claims,
and this is the content I supposedly used
I don't know whether to appeal further? Thanks for the ideas
This is my audio clip content
https://youtu.be/GRx76o67FyA?si=2P5i1tE-eyLjAvEk&t=84
Content found in 10:33 - 10:43 & 11:08 - 11:47 Tencent Music Entertainment Group claims,
and this is the content I supposedly used
https://youtu.be/BShJs_QOVg4?si=GdWsRyJixQlt9hwV
I don't know whether to appeal further? Thanks for the ideas
geposted 3 hours ago
Unfortunately this is the kind of thing that can happen these days when using openly available samples and loops, especially ones from the same pack. Someone else uses them to create some "music" and uploads it. The YouTube algorithm compares yours to theirs and sends you a message.
The YouTube detection system is flawed. There are many videos telling similar stories - even people who've literally played something on the fly live have been hit with copyright claims.
The YouTube detection system is flawed. There are many videos telling similar stories - even people who've literally played something on the fly live have been hit with copyright claims.
geposted 22 minutes ago





