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Youtube Music

YouTube, Spotify Remove QAnon Anthem After Original Composer Asserts Copyright (nbcnews.com) 72

The Washington Post calls it "the gauzy, schmaltzy, vaguely creepy orchestral music unofficially dubbed the QAnon anthem." They also report that it's been "unceremoniously yanked from YouTube and Spotify for violating a harassment policy and alleged copyright infringement, respectively."

NBC News reports: In an email to NBC News, composer Will Van De Crommert wrote that he was "exploring legal options" and that "this particular track, which was originally entitled Mirrors, is available to license online. I however was not notified of any licenses for political rallies, nor did I authorize such use." A YouTube representative said in an email Monday that the company "removed the video in question for violating our harassment policy, which prohibits content targeting someone by suggesting they're complicit in a conspiracy theory used to justify real-world violence, such as QAnon." A Spotify representative said that "the content in question was removed following an infringement claim...."

Van De Crommert said the uploads in question are identical to his and that he has no association with the account that put his music online alongside QAnon language. "I do not align with the views of QAnon, and this individual has unlawfully distributed my music under their own name," he said.

The Post credits the song's morose strings for its impact, describing it as "the kind of stock sentimental, algorithmically emotional pablum regularly employed to sell us trucks, insurance, petrochemicals, diapers, more trucks, pharmaceuticals, whole-grain bread and presidents."
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YouTube, Spotify Remove QAnon Anthem After Original Composer Asserts Copyright

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  • Wow this story has been up for like 10 minutes without any butthurt Qballs song some mental gymnastics routine about how copyright law shouldn't apply to heroes like them.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It's Sunday morning, they're all in church.

    • by splutty ( 43475 )

      Hey. If it works for NFTs it should work for Q!

  • Augmentation (Score:1, Offtopic)

    by AmazingRuss ( 555076 )
    If a robot makes one guy able to do the work of 5 guys, 4 guys are still getting laid off, and the first guy isn't going to get a raise because the other 4 are desperate and will do the job for less.
    • You don't get how this works. 4 guys aren't getting laid off, 4 guys are repurposed for other jobs more suitable to human beings. Really what you're pointing out is how many "jobs" are actually useless busy work that don't benefit the economy in any conceivable way and they exist primarily so flunky failsons have a chance to earn income that doesn't come from daddy.

      I'm ignoring that your comment is wholly unrelated to the article becuase you didn't seem to notice yourself.

  • If they had just revoked the copyright on the Horst Wessels Lied?

  • by walterbyrd ( 182728 ) on Sunday October 09, 2022 @10:52AM (#62950989)

    Seems to me that anybody could make some insane video, or meme, or whatever, and claim it's from QAnon.
    I don't follow any QAnon crap that closely. I really don't know.

    • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Sunday October 09, 2022 @11:13AM (#62951029)

      There is a definite clear theme of particular conspiracy that is "QAnon" mostly from it's now years old origins in that there is a secret group of "patriots" deep in the government working with the Trump admin under the radar to weed out the "deep state" bad actors and either imprison them or even execute them with secret military tribunals.

      Since that idea was always pretty silly and the longer the Trump admin went on without the "big day" of the mass arrests of their enemies they were all counting on the people that run with it have folded just about every other conspiracy into it, from JFK and 9/11 all the way to Flat Earth. If you believe in any of these type of conspiracies the Q people have a way to bring you into their fold.

      Q folk never have to be "right" because just like Nostradamus the "predictions" that Q makes are so vague and contradictory at times they can be mentally stretched to never be wrong. As far as they see it there are no wrong predictions, just wrong timelines (look at the growing image of the "Q Clock" to see how wild this gets). Anyways it's become pretty clear that Q today is just Ron Watkins from 8Chan or any one of their close assosciates.

      • This nonsense all came from Michael Flynn.

        In case people forgot, Michael Flynn was the guy that had a DSL connection installed in his Pentagon office because he found the security protocol for DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE networks too onerous. Slashdot is populated by folks that understand IT - if someone in your office said "Nah, I'll just install my own internet connection" because they didn't want to use the proxy, how would that go down with IT security? Like a lead fucking zeppelin is how.

        MEANWHILE people

      • Hucksters, and even many true believers, have learned to never be too specific. Sometimes when they give a date and it flops then the followers all leave. Not always but it's happened. There was the cult/sect that predicted the second coming on a certain day and the members sold off all their belongings, including houses, went up the hill to wait... and nothing happened. Most of them left, embarrassed. These days, they dig in, admitting mistakes is not allowed.

        • by jbengt ( 874751 )

          Sometimes when they give a date and it flops then the followers all leave. Not always but it's happened.

          Sadly, they might lose some momentum from a wrong date prediction, but true believers almost never leave the fold when proven wrong that way. Not immediately, anyway.

          • There were the Millerites. Their leader eventaully settled on October 22nd, 1844, as the "no later than" date of the return of Jesus. When it didn't happen, the group mostly split up and went different ways, some forming their own groups becoming the Adventist movements (the biggest being Seventh Day Adventists). This date was know as the "Great Disappointment". While the movement kept on, the theology changed a lot and varied between the groups (splittists!) and they stopped being a doomsday cult. Som

    • by Sigma 7 ( 266129 )

      QAnon exists simply by posting messages. The only thing that's necessary is identifying him, and there's two likely suspects.

      "Official" QAnon posts are identified by using tripcodes. These are generated by typing in a certain password, and generates a hash. Users posting message using the same password will also have the same hash, and that identifies QAnon.

      Of course, his initial password choices on were compromised, thus he had to change the password a few times.

      I don't follow any QAnon crap that closely.

  • Did John De Lancie sue them yet?

  • Have some copyright troll assert a prior right to the Russian national anthem, and get the East Texas courts to rubber-stamp the claim. Then the troller can levy against frozen Russian assets In the US. Profit!

  • Soon someone will build the musical equivalent of DALL-E, and you'll be able to ask it to generate "gauzy, schmaltzy, vaguely creepy orchestral music".
    No more copyright problems!

  • by rHBa ( 976986 ) on Sunday October 09, 2022 @09:51PM (#62952103)
    QAnon-non-non, push pineapple, ham and cheese QAnon-non-non, it's pizza paedophiles for me To the far, far right, it's Donald Trump we try to please Come and dance every night, to made-up conspiracies
  • Interesting that we say we value STEM but patents are good for 20 years while the great grandchildren of some maroon who wrote down a few notes can collect royalties 150 years later.

    This is a revealed preference. Nobody actually cares about engineers. Rarely is one on the cover of People Magazine. Only artists.

It isn't easy being the parent of a six-year-old. However, it's a pretty small price to pay for having somebody around the house who understands computers.

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