Copyright question

stepskivuk

Member
I need one information. For example, if I'm partner with Fullscreen with channel X, and everything is perfect. After that I make another channel Y, add that channel fullscreen, get copyight claims, and get disabled in some way, will I lose partnership with channel X ?
 
This is not a situation for uninformed opinion.

Fine. Yes. This is because networks simply do not tolerate partners that can put their network at risk due to copyright infringement. If the user was to add the other channel he is planning to make to his current Fullscreen contract and it was to attain a copyright strike, it would breach his contract, resulting in the contract being terminated resulting in both channels in his partnership being terminated altogether.
 
Fine. Yes. This is because networks simply do not tolerate partners that can put their network at risk due to copyright infringement. If the user was to add the other channel he is planning to make to his current Fullscreen contract and it was to attain a copyright strike, it would breach his contract, resulting in the contract being terminated resulting in both channels in his partnership being terminated altogether.

They may terminate the partnership link on the one channel, but they have no reason to terminate the link on the other.

What you're suggesting would be the ideal way to break out of any contract. Just open a second channel, get it linked to your existing network, load it up with copyrighted material and get terminated for a strike. The original channel doesn't have a strike though so you're free and clear. Extremely unlikely.
 
They may terminate the partnership link on the one channel, but they have no reason to terminate the link on the other.

What you're suggesting would be the ideal way to break out of any contract. Just open a second channel, get it linked to your existing network, load it up with copyrighted material and get terminated for a strike. The original channel doesn't have a strike though so you're free and clear. Extremely unlikely.

That's true. I guess the best thing for the op to do is simply not to do anything that would attract any incidents to do with copyright. That way it's a win-win situation.
 
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