![]() CD Baby dropped the claim as soon as they saw the dispute, so at least that part of the process worked.” We’re going to figure out what went wrong and fix it. It looks like the match system really blew it on this one. SmellyOctopus shared the experience on Twitter, where it got a response from Team YouTube, which read, “Thanks for flagging this. The claim sent to SmellyOctopus states that the claimant is CD Baby and that the “policy” applied is to monetize the video-in other words, CD Baby added ads to this nine-minute mic check and will get the non-existent revenue generated by that. ![]() It was automatically uploaded to YouTube, where the Content ID system flagged 30 seconds of just SmellyOctopus’ voice as belonging to a company called CD Baby. In early January 2019, SmellyOctopus did a nine-minute, private stream where spoke into his microphone to check how new technology he was using affected it. YouTuber SmellyOctopus has over 21,000 subscribers to his YouTube channel, and about 2,000 on Twitch. And sometimes, they fail so badly that they scare creators and make them self-censor.
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