

It’s authored by the guy who coined the term originally; so however he’s using it, that’s the way it’s used.
It’s authored by the guy who coined the term originally; so however he’s using it, that’s the way it’s used.
Presumably, that would be content awareness and copyright compliance’s job to attend to? Enough of the commentary creators I enjoy have moved to a new platform specifically to avoid being demonetized for showing short clips that I assume straight reposting wouldn’t need a whole AI push.
In your opinion it will be reaction videos? There’s so many other kinds of “unoriginal” content they could be targeting. AI slop, the videos that are a single still image of a product zooming in and out slowly, there’s tons of different kinds of unoriginal out there.
Shocked AF that they are on the list at all since they buy their network time from T-Mobile.
Could it be that these guys are going to “Where are we going, Papa EA?” them in a few years?
(Can’t find a link to the referenced comic on my phone but basically EA is known for buying up smaller studios and then closing them only a few years later after sucking them dry. This led to a comic of them taking little unsuspecting companies into the dark woods to end them.)