Elon Musk’s Twitter drama ensued. Users uploaded entire feature films and entertained netizens without charging a penny.
What happened: At the end of November, Twitter’s automated copyright strike system appeared to have stopped working.
A user has uploaded the full ‘“The Fast and the Furious Tokyo Drift” over a 50 tweet thread and went viral, according to to Forbes.
Although the thread was removed, the damage was done by then.
Twitter did not immediately respond gasoline ga‘s request for comments.
Another user uploaded another movie,”1995 hackers”, two minutes straight in a similar thread that got shut down again. However, users have continued to upload the entirety of various movies, some of which have not yet been verified.
At the time of writing another movie,”Need speed,” was posted by a user on a 66 tweet thread – still visible as of Monday.
Why it matters: According to Twitter’s official copyright policy, “the platform will respond to reports of alleged copyright infringement,” including “unauthorized use of a copyrighted video or image uploaded through our media hosting services.”
Breaking the copyright enforcement system could prove to be a nightmare Twitter if it allows users to upload long videos over 40 minutes before you fix it. It is still being determined how Twitter will deal with such copyright infringement scenarios that are springing up on the platform, the report says.
This story was originally published on November 21, 2022.
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