
These restrictions won’t change the availability of your video on YouTube.
Restrict certain platforms: Copyright owners may choose to restrict the apps or websites where their content appears. Your video could be blocked worldwide or just in certain countries/regions. If copyright owners don't want their content reused, they can:īlock a video: Copyright owners may choose to block your video, which means people can't watch it.
Ads might play before the video or during it (if the video is longer than 8 minutes). They often allow their content to be used in YouTube videos in exchange for having ads run on those videos. Content ID claims usually mean we found content on your YouTube channel that someone else owns.Ĭopyright owners are the ones who decide whether other people can reuse their copyrighted content. Am I in trouble if my video has a Content ID claim?
You can also filter to get a list of videos that have claims on them by clicking Filter Copyright claims.
Under the Content found during section, click the timestamp to play the segment claimed by Content ID. Click the Down arrow to expand the claim details. Hover over Copyright claim in the Restrictions column and click SEE DETAILS. In the Restrictions column, if a video has a claim on it, it will be labeled Copyright claim. To find more details about the claims on your videos: When a Content ID claims your video, you’ll get an email from YouTube. How do I know if my video has a Content ID claim? In these cases, the advertising revenue goes to the copyright owners of the claimed content. They can also allow the claimed content to remain on YouTube with ads. These claims are automatically generated when an uploaded video matches another video (or part of another video) in our Content ID system.Ĭopyright owners can set Content ID to block uploads that match a copyrighted work they own the rights to. If you upload a video that contains copyright-protected content, your video could get a Content ID claim.