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Rick Beato vs UMG: Fighting Copyright Claims Over Music Clips on YouTube

Sunday August 31, 2025. 06:34 AM , from Slashdot
Rick Beato vs UMG: Fighting Copyright Claims Over Music Clips on YouTube
In 2017 Rick Beato streamed 'Rick's Rant Episode 2' — and just received a copyright claim this month. And days after jazz pianist Chick Corea died in 2021, Beato livestreamed a half-hour video which was mostly commentary, but with several excerpts from Corea's albums (at least one more than three minutes long). He also received a copyright claim for that one this August — just minutes after the claim on his 2017 video.
These videos 'are all fair use,' Beato argues in a new video, noting it's also affected other popular YouTube channels like The Professor of Rock:

Rick Beato: Universal Music Group [UMG] has continued to send emails about copyright content ID claims — and now copyright strikes — on my channel. As a matter of fact, I have three shorts — these are under a minute long — that if they go through in the next four days, I'll have three strikes on my channel! Now if you don't fight these things, those three strikes would actually remove my channel from YouTube.

Five months ago Rick Beato had posted a clip from his interview with singer-songwriter Adam Duritz (founder of The Counting Crows) on YouTube. After 250,000 views, he'd earned a whopping $36.52 — and then Universal Music Group also claimed that video violated their copyright. (In the background the video played Duritz's song as he described how he wrote it.) 'So they're gonna take my channel down over less than a hundred bucks — for using a small segment from an interview with him, on a song he sang on,' Beato complained on YouTube. 'That video is 55 seconds long!'

'You need to play people's music to talk about it,' Beato argues. 'That is the definition of fair use. These are interviews with the people about their careers.' (And the interviews actually help promote the artists for the record labels...)
Rick Beato: The next one has me in it — it's an Olivia Rodrigo song — that I played maybe 10 seconds of the song on, and the short is 42 seconds long. Who did it? UMG. The third copyright strike is from a Hans Zimmer short. It's also UMG — it's from the Crimson Tide soundtrack.
Now, what do these things say...? 'Your video is scheduled to be removed in four days and your channel will get a copyright strike due to a removal request from a claimant. If you delete your video before then, your channel won't get a copyright strike.' [And there's also emails like 'After reviewing your dispute, UMG has decided that their copyright claim is still valid...'] I've had probably 4,000 claims, over the last 9 years — from things that are fair use. [When he interviewed producer Rick Rubin, that video got 13 separate copyright claims.]

That's when I hired a lawyer to fight these. [Full-time, Beato says later.] And what he's done is he fought every single claim... We have successfully fought thousands of these now. But it literally costs me so much money to do this. Since we've been fighting these things — and never lost one — they still keep coming in... They're all Universal Music Group. So they obviously have hired some third party company, that are dredging up things, they're looking for things that haven't been claimed in the past — they're taking videos from seven or eight years ago!

Slashdot reader MrBrklyn (Slashdot reader #4,775) writes on the 'New York's Linux Scene' site that video bloggers like Beato 'have been hounded by copyright pirates like UMG,' arguing that new videos of support are a 'rebellion gaining traction'. (Beato's video drew 1,369,859 views — and attracted 24,605 Comments — along with videos of support from professional musicians like drummer Anthony Edwards, guitarist Justin Hawkins, and bassist Scot Lade, as well as two different professional music attorneys.)

'Since there's rarely humans making any of these decisions and it's automated by bots, they don't understand these claims are against Universal Music's best interests,' argues the long-running blog Saving Country Music (first appearing on MySpace in 2008).

On YouTube videos, creators can freely filch copyrighted photos and other people's videos virtually free of ramifications. You can take an entire 2 1/2 hour film, impose it over a background, and upload it to YouTube, and usually avoid any problems. But feature a barely audible 8 1/2-second clip of music underneath audio dialogue, and you could have your entire podcast career evaporate overnight... People continue to ask, 'Why doesn't Saving Country Music has a podcast?' Because what's the point of having a music podcast when you can't feature music? In fact, after over a decade of refusing to start one, I finally did, music free. What happened? About a dozen episodes in, someone took out a claim, and not only were all the episodes deleted, so was the entire account, even though no music even appeared on any of the episodes. I was given absolutely no recourse to fight whatever false claim had been made...
The music industry continues to so colossal fail the artists and catalogs they represent, and the fans they're supposed to serve with this current system of how podcasts are handled. If everything changes today thanks to the Rick Beato rant, it would still be 15 years too late. But at least it would happen.
Instead, they write, 'Music labels have been leaving major opportunities to promote their catalogs and performers on the table with their punitive copyright claims that make it impossible to feature music on music podcasts and other platforms...
'You aren't screwing podcasters. You're screwing artists who could be using podcasts to help promote their music. '

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/25/08/31/045201/rick-beato-vs-umg-fighting-copyright-claims...

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