NVIDIA’s DLSS 5 trailer has been taken down due to ‘copyright’ infringement | NVIDIA’s DLSS 5 announcement trailer is currently offline on YouTube due to a copyright infringement claim from an unlikely source

https://www.tweaktown.com/news/110891/nvidias-dlss-5-trailer-has-been-taken-down-due-to-copyright-infringement/index.html

12 Comments

  1. Interesting/disappointing details of this snafu:

    >Okay, so NVIDIA’s big DLSS 5 reveal trailer from its GTC conference last month has been one of the most talked-about PC gaming-related announcements for all of the wrong reasons. The AI rendering tool, which applies an almost post-processing filter to games like Resident Evil Requiem to deliver ‘photorealistic’ lighting and visuals, has come under fire from seemingly every corner of the gaming community.
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    >And now, here we are in April, and NVIDIA’s DLSS 5 announcement trailer is no longer available to watch on YouTube on the company’s official GeForce channel. And no, it’s not because NVIDIA is responding to the feedback and retooling the technology for a re-reveal or re-announcement; it’s now blocked on “copyright grounds.”
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    >A clear mistake, but also one that highlights the limitations of Google’s automated system for YouTube. Apparently, the Italian television channel La7 included footage from the DLSS 5 reveal in a recent broadcast and has since copyrighted it. From there, essentially every video on YouTube with DLSS 5 trailer footage was issued a copyright strike and said to be in violation, with the videos taken down with the following message:
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    >”Video unavailable: This video contains content from La7, who has blocked it in your country on copyright grounds.”
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    >What makes this alarming is that the video was taken down with seemingly no human interaction or input, as it’s clear that NVIDIA not only created DLSS 5, for better or worse, but also the trailer that has been a hot topic of discussion this year. We’re assuming this will be resolved fairly quickly. Still, it will be interesting to see whether YouTube responds to this case and claims that false copyright infringement notices like this are prevalent on the platform.

    It’s been clear for a while now that the oft-abused copyright infringement system on social media platforms like Youtube is broken and seemingly by design. Further, the lack of any human being in the process makes this a much more difficult problem to solve especially for individuals and those without connections.

  2. filovirusyay on

    hey, maybe youtube will finally do something about their horrific copyright system

    (doubt)

  3. PrairiePopsicle on

    AI FUCKING EVERYTHING UP, WHATS THIS, ITS AI COMING FLYING IN ON AI WITH A CHAIR! ITS PANDEMONIUM FOLKS!

  4. As an italian, we’re kinda good at doing meme worthy thing. First Tifa from ff7 Live on the senate, now this. I read the new this morning and couldn’t stop laughing

  5. ischickenafruit on

    Excerpt from the 2050 Wikipedia Article on “Causes and origins of the Robot War”.

    > While few people realized it at the time, historians now trace the beginning of the Robot War to an initial inciting incident in early 2026. An automated AI system operated by Google’s YouTube service began suppressing the announcement of Nvidias AI system.

  6. Kinda ironic that a company pushing AI-heavy tech gets hit by a completely broken automated system. This is less about NVIDIA and more about how flawed YouTube’s copyright system is if it can take down the original creator’s own content, it’s defo not working as intended

  7. There’s a simple solution to this, which is to penalize false positives. The offending party should have to pay based on anticpated views lost during the time the video was down, if they’re found guilty of a false takedown claim.

  8. DMCA was broken beyond use from day 1 of its inception. Can’t believe it still hasn’t been replaced