YouTube blocks songs from artists including Adele and Green Day amid licensing negotiations

Date:

Share:


Songs from popular artists have begun to disappear from YouTube as the platform’s deal with the performing rights organization SESAC (Society of European Stage Authors and Composers) approaches its expiration date. As reported by , certain songs by Adele, Green Day, Bob Dylan, R.E.M., Burna Boy and other artists have been blocked in the US, though their entire catalogs aren’t necessarily affected. Videos that have been pulled, like Adele’s “Rolling in the Deep,” now just show a black screen with the message: “This video contains content from SESAC. It is not available in your country.”

In a statement to Tech Reader, a YouTube spokesperson said the platform has been in talks with SESAC to renew the deal, but “despite our best efforts, we were unable to reach an equitable agreement before its expiration. We take copyright very seriously and as a result, content represented by SESAC is no longer available on YouTube in the US. We are in active conversations with SESAC and are hoping to reach a new deal as soon as possible.” According to a source that spoke to Variety, however, the deal hasn’t even expired yet — it’ll reportedly terminate sometime next week — and the move on YouTube’s part may be a negotiation tactic. SESAC has not yet released a statement.



Source link

━ more like this

Why are astronauts using aging tech? NASA spaceflight expert has the answers

Astronauts floating in space using what looks like “old tech” might sound bizarre at first. But as it turns out, there’s a very...

Your Pixel 10 can now run Steam games offline (sort of)

Smartphones pretending to be gaming machines isn’t new, but the Pixel 10 just did something that actually feels a bit wild. You can...

Teens are acting in utterly weird ways with their AI friends

While AI chatbots have been used for good and evil, they were built to serve as a handy tool. And AI companions were...

The UK government reportedly wants Anthropic to expand its presence in London

While the US and Anthropic are in the midst of a major dispute, the UK is trying to sway the San Francisco-based AI...

Samsung will discontinue its Messages app in July and replace it with Google’s

Samsung is putting the final nail in the coffin for its own messaging app. The smartphone maker posted an "End of Service Announcement"...
spot_img