I mapped @DragonForce's 'Through the Fire and Flames' in @HolyWowStudios' Trombone Champ and I think it's the most cursed thing I have made.
https://t.co/LgxBJtVyCb
@NinanininVT just out of curiosity have you looked at using sonobus before? https://t.co/pPnMocWzoh
seems like it'd work well for this use case, but it might have a bit of a learning curve.
@KazamaVT i think a "red flag" here implies some sort of malicious intent or incompetence and isn't the best way to describe what seems like a UX issue for new users.
i would recommend giving them feedback on this by opening an issue on their GitHub repo https://t.co/JFNF6n70XE
@KazamaVT this behaviour is intended and should not be considered a red flag, altough it could still be telegraphed better in the UI when a plugin outputting video is causing this.
@KazamaVT this is happening because you have an NDI output active, and OBS will disable certain settings if it's outputting any video. disabling the NDI output under Tools > DistroAV NDI settings will re-enable those settings. the screenshots below show the difference here.
@VicMelsky@sinisterbart they pay out super chats and memberships to the creator as usual. Content ID checks are only performed after the stream is finished, where labels then receive ad revenue (they have a separate system for matching certain audiovisual content while live for blocking purposes)
@VicMelsky@sinisterbart if they actually did then we would've seen something come out about it long ago, and it would also likely result in a lot of potential legal trouble for them if something like this happened.
@Doginasuit@Lucapon01@DanielTChirwa i don't think he ever says that the specific feature he's using will be removed so much as it's a general statement on the way the web as a whole had changed to be less open, and that for one reason or another a change outside of your control could break something you built.
@ramennnnoodle@JesseCox@CapablePerform1 12 hours has been their policy for many years, and before then it was 11 hours
https://t.co/jAaTMoiBde
people uploading longer footage either have some unofficial workaround, or are just whitelisted to do so for whatever reason (although i've seen no confirmation of this).
@geminitays this may still be possible as youtube supports basic colouring from officially supported subtitle formats, but I'd imagine anything uploaded in youtube's native format will be removed.
they have more details on what formats they support here: https://t.co/8UpPipXYHX
@turdnado33@Stretchedwiener AI companies have shown time and time again they flatly do not care about those who create or host the content they use to train their models, and will do whatever it takes to gather as much data as possible, and will even use piracy sites and torrents to get copyrighted material
@turdnado33@Stretchedwiener Wikipedia's database is still free to download for anyone.
https://t.co/TtqQni0kR1
Even if it was paywalled, that wouldn't stop AI companies from just scraping the site manually, which is often done with no regard to the additional strain they put on the servers.
@DJSnM@YouTube i'd recommend contacting the BBC informing them about this (and also disputing the claim). this is almost certainly a mistake on their part, and also violates YouTube's Content ID's rules, so i'm hopeful that they'll be receptive and correct the issue on their end.