Warner Music, the world's fourth largest music group, is putting its archive of music video online and making it available for free to fans. ADVERTISEMENT if(window.yzq_d==null)window.yzq_d=new Object(); window.yzq_d['lFAoAESOxLk-']='&U=139riqtea%2fN%3dl
French video-sharing site DailyMotion announced a partnership today with Warner Music Group to share ad revenue from Warner’s music videos. Warner, you’ll remember, also has deals with YouTube (see Warner-YouTube), Brightcove, Google Video, Muvee and
Google Inc. said on Monday it would expand testing of its much-anticipated video advertising system by working with two major music labels to embed video ads on Web sites that make money running them.
Full steam ahead on the video deals today. Google Video just announced that they’ve struck deals with both Sony and Warner Music to distribute their music videos, with revenue coming from Google AdWords’ Video Ads.
ouTube has offered other labels an option for an equity stake in the company as part of proposed deals. “If Warner took YouTube up on such an offer, it could create an expensive precedent for every other copyright holder YouTube wants to settle with,”
Second- this will limit the videos syndication beyond YouTube because you’re not effectively the owner of the content when Warner Brothers has a “veto” clause.
To make the deal happen, YouTube developed a royalty-tracking system that will detect when homemade videos are using copyrighted material. YouTube says the technology will enable Warner Music to review the video and decide whether it wants to approve or r
Under this, WMG is making available al its videos on YouTube and will allow for users to use the videos in their own creations. YouTube is developing an automated system to digitally identify copyrighted music and video uploaded by its users, and will the