YouTube's content ID system. AGAIN.
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@sh_code said in YouTube's content ID system. AGAIN.:
just for good measure.
Doubtless he'll be thankful for any help on this.
I might recommend also sprinkling liberally from the word bag "pending immediate advisory regulatory legal action consequence liability", which is also a good answer if a 4 year old wants a sandwich.
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@sh_code said in YouTube's content ID system. AGAIN.:
good luck
Methinks you don't know the post you're replying to is a decade old and unlikely to receive a response....
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@Tsaukpaetra just like an email to Google regarding bullshit copyright claims!
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@Gribnit said in YouTube's content ID system. AGAIN.:
Doubtless he'll be thankful for any help on this.
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One plausible assumption we had was, Google relies on checksums to keep track of copyrighted content, and a possible hash-collision between copyrighted files and benign files sharing the same hash can trigger false violations.
Or, you know. Maybe the files are named the same and DS_Store has literally the same content.
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@Gąska for some folders that might even be true, but frequently it won't. .DS_Store is sort of like thumbs.db of old except with more proprietary goodness.
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@Arantor thumbs.db doesn't seem to contain any machine-specific data; the same folder with the same contents, on the same Windows version, will have the same thumbs.db every time even on different computers. I don't know anything about DS_Store though.
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@Gąska That was the nearest equivalent I could think of; it's a file in a folder that reflects metadata about the rest of the folder. It can also include display options for folders and stuff like that but most folders don't have that set, meaning the nearest logical equivalent really is thumbs.db - and most folders won't have images in them so their .DS_Store content will in practice be the same...
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@Arantor So it's more like a desktop.ini or whatever it was called.
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@Zecc it's both. It's all the folder metadata as well as thumbnails and other stuff.