What If I dispute "Matched Third Party" claims?

What will happen if I dispute my matched 3rd party claims, I don't own the contents though so the claims are correct but what if I dispute them and fail will I receive a copyright strike or they will just reinstate the claim without penalizing my channel? The claim is from UEFA.
 
Can somebody actually give this guy an answer for crying out loud!
As far as I know you can get in trouble for disputing a claim that you know is true. You should never dispute a claim unless you feel it is invalid.
I think some of the responders are going for the "ask a silly question, get a silly answer" response.
 
What will happen if I dispute my matched 3rd party claims, I don't own the contents though so the claims are correct but what if I dispute them and fail will I receive a copyright strike or they will just reinstate the claim without penalizing my channel? The claim is from UEFA.

If you don't own all of the content in the video, you shouldn't call more attention to the material by disputing the claim. Since all it did was match 3rd party content, it means they haven't done anything to your video yet. Just breathe a sigh of relief and don't think about it. Or just don't upload things that belong to other people.
 
You shouldn't dispute the claim if it's a correct match. The copyright holder can decide whether to: release the claim, reinstate the claim or issue a take down-formally known as a DMCA complaint which will also give you a copyright strike in addition to having the video removed from YouTube. Most copyright holders will reinstate the claim after a false dispute because they still want to earn revenue from the video, it's rare that they will issue a take down. However, that being said don't risk it (filing false disputes can also get your account terminated by Google if you're caught).

PS Moving this to the Copyright/Claims section of the forum for you.
 
I was under the impression that a failed dispute would not give you a copyright strike. From what I understand, only a direct complaint from an actual copyright holder or a failed appeal will give you a strike.
 
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