Does Rumble help with Licensing?

I get it. So a Youtuber and Rumble take a gamble with a non-exclusive license since it is a one off payment. The video management option shares the revenue, if there is any.
yeah basically they will give you "X" amount up front, or you can gamble and say "hey, I think my video will get millions of views" and choose the other option. At that point you have less rights to your own video, but a bigger potential to make more through Rumble. You just need to read the fine print to make sure you aren't screwing yourself. That goes for Rumble or any other company.

Like I said, I have made more on one video just on youtube than I have on Rumble, but there are plenty of Rumble videos that have made more for me than their Youtube counterparts. I haven't been using Rumble much lately so things might have changed again, just read their stuff and make sure you know what you are doing. If you have questions before you upload I have used them quite a bit and have friends who have made good money on the site. I'm pretty knowledgeable at this stuff but I'm no pro, so don't go completely off what I say. I'm just another end user...
 
he has a gopro and everyone likes his dogs, when it comes to rumble they will only pick HD video that will make money for them. this is why its a scam, they want rights to your video so they can gain money from your video in return they just talk to no one but the news people who might not even show it on tv. most of the videos found on the news comes from youtube not rumble.

another problem is that rumble very hates video games, rarely you ever see a video of a game that has over 5k of views on rumble website. they won't publish it and they dont want to be sue by anyone and they cant make video games go to the news people.

its all a scam, rumble pays people to like rumble website so they can get people to upload videos to give up rights to them.

Rumble is a reputable company. Gaming videos are not what websites want. Please don't slander a company just because you have a product that is not desirable for that industry. Even my content is not what is desired for those licensing deals.
 
yeah basically they will give you "X" amount up front, or you can gamble and say "hey, I think my video will get millions of views" and choose the other option. At that point you have less rights to your own video, but a bigger potential to make more through Rumble. You just need to read the fine print to make sure you aren't screwing yourself. That goes for Rumble or any other company.

Like I said, I have made more on one video just on youtube than I have on Rumble, but there are plenty of Rumble videos that have made more for me than their Youtube counterparts. I haven't been using Rumble much lately so things might have changed again, just read their stuff and make sure you know what you are doing. If you have questions before you upload I have used them quite a bit and have friends who have made good money on the site. I'm pretty knowledgeable at this stuff but I'm no pro, so don't go completely off what I say. I'm just another end user...

OK, interesting. They made it sound like you keep all the copyright and licensing to the video but I guess that's not true?
 
Rumble is a reputable company. Gaming videos are not what websites want. Please don't slander a company just because you have a product that is not desirable for that industry. Even my content is not what is desired for those licensing deals.
For some reason when I read this
OK, interesting. They made it sound like you keep all the copyright and licensing to the video but I guess that's not true?
With non exclusive rights, they will own a non exclusive right to distribute the video, but you also maintain your own rights to distribute non exclusively. Basically you both own rights to the video and neither party can sell an exclusive license. Exclusive rights means you give them full rights to the video and you can no longer claim any rights to it. They have full rights and the video is no longer yours. I always choose non exclusive so that I can maintain my own rights to the video.
 
With non exclusive rights, they will own a non exclusive right to distribute the video, but you also maintain your own rights to distribute non exclusively. Basically you both own rights to the video and neither party can sell an exclusive license. Exclusive rights means you give them full rights to the video and you can no longer claim any rights to it. They have full rights and the video is no longer yours. I always choose non exclusive so that I can maintain my own rights to the video.

Right so the profit sharing is exclusive but you have the option to not do that.
 
Right so the profit sharing is exclusive but you have the option to not do that.
I haven't used profit sharing so I'm not 100% sure how it works. They used to have different options, the one I have always used is non exclusive. This allows me to keep my own rights to the video.
 
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