This is for YouTube.
Before you submit a takedown request, you should know:
Copyright exceptions: You need to consider whether fair use, fair dealing, or a similar exception to copyright law applies. If an exception applies, then the takedown request you submit would be invalid.
Personal info:
If a video is removed for copyright infringement, the name of the copyright owner will be visible on YouTube in place of the video.
If you give us a valid legal alternative, such as the name of a company or authorized representative, we'll review and apply it if appropriate.
The copyright owner name you enter will become part of the public record of your request. Learn more about the public record of your takedown request.
Your full legal name is required to complete a takedown request. It may be shared with the uploader of the video removed for copyright infringement.
The primary email address from your takedown request is shared with the uploader of the video removed for copyright infringement. The uploader might get in touch with you to resolve their copyright strike.
Your physical address and phone number will remain confidential unless requested as part of a lawsuit. If YouTube is required to share any information, we’ll notify you before doing so.
Scheduled requests: You can schedule takedown requests to take effect after 7 days. Scheduled requests will notify the uploader and give them 7 days before the content gets removed.
Non-video content: If you want to submit a takedown request for non-video content, such as channel icon images, follow the steps outlined here. Our webform doesn’t support non-video takedown requests.
Generally a strike is a mark against your account indicating you have infringed someone's copyright. Your YouTube account, for example, can have three strikes against it before you are blocked from using the site; the Copyright Alert System takes different actions based on how many strikes are on your IP address.
Not unless you make a recording of it and publish it without permission of the copyright owner, assuming the music is copyrighted.
No. Strikes stay for at least six months.
in the menu, click on create server and then go on it type sv_lan 0 in console and then others can join your server
According to YouTube policies, "A copyright strike may expire in 6 months, subject to certain conditions, as long as no additional copyright notifications are received during that time."
Craters.
yes they can take the student strike against the Vietnam War.
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Plagiarism on YouTube can result in your video being taken down or a copyright strike being issued, but it is unlikely to lead to an arrest. However, if the plagiarism involves severe copyright infringement or other legal issues, it is possible for legal action to be taken against you, which could potentially lead to legal consequences.
No remixing and editing is fine. It just cannot be the actual song that you are playing
you need source sdk
craters