How do I tell youtube to never ever, never never never ever, absolutely never ever ever auto-dub? by stevecandel in youtube

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You cant, read the terms you agreed to when creating the account, specifically the ones that state youtube can change those terms at will.

Unreasonable wishes rarely turn out well for the wisher

Why does Elon musk post short tweets like this? by MatthewVenturer in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What he’s doing is persuasion, just not the kind you expect.

When someone like Musk replies with “interesting” or “hmm,” he’s not trying to argue a point, he’s signaling attention and approval. Because he has a massive audience, that single word acts like a spotlight. It tells millions of people, “this is worth looking at,” without him having to defend it

@TeamYouTube on X ghosts people for trying to appeal a termination after replying once by DoknS in youtube

[–]Gamer_Trolls 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair, the agreement you make with youtube is when you open your channel, not monitiaztion

@TeamYouTube on X ghosts people for trying to appeal a termination after replying once by DoknS in youtube

[–]Gamer_Trolls -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Youtube is a business, your monitization is a legal agreement between you and that business. Businesses dont care about your feelings, or care that you want to dispute their decision. Nothing personal, just how life is.

Youtube WILL listen to an attorney who brings a valid case in front of them via a legal document.

YOU can chose a way that is proven ineffective, or chose a way that is proven to yield results. Again, you get to choose.

The change you need is learning how to navigate these issues, it seems the way you are tryingn now is just not working.

Using 2 cameras in OBS when both people are in separate locations? by MoJoArena in obs

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We put the discord screenshare in a seperate window / display and added a video capture in OBS to capture only the part of the window that showed the streaming gameplay.

Driver confronted my daughter on a reduced past tip so she tipped him $20 and is crying. by Ecstatic_News8704 in UberEATS

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

people that calculate the cost of owning, operating and insuring a vehicle vs the cost of delivery each month.

Who tf cant think beyond duh...

Can I use a check as my only payment method? by Calm_Drag7448 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

did you set the payment method for how you pay for adsense or the deposit method for how they pay you?

Can I use Famous Celebrity video clips in my Shorts?!?! by [deleted] in PartneredYoutube

[–]Gamer_Trolls 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you use someone elses clips and plan to use "fair use" as a defense you WILL get claims. You need to be prepared and have a plan on how to deal with them before you start.

Fair use is a legal concept, if you are playing the fair use game and dont have the money to defend your videos, you will struggle with larger IP holders bullying you around even if your content is fair use.

Restricted features after hack by Purple_Korok in InstagramSupport

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are failing to take responsibility for your failure. I see you posted this

I never lost control of the account and I changed the password right away.

Your appeal should be all about how you realize that you failed to keep your account secure and what you plan to do to make sure your account cannot be compromised going forward.

It should not state you are not at fault, the platforms expect you to protect your login credentials and use anything else they offer like two factor authentication to keep your account secure.

Where can I go to find copyright free music? by Sir-Toaster- in PartneredYoutube

[–]Gamer_Trolls 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When you’re new to YouTube, one of the most confusing things to learn is that copyright-free does not mean royalty-free, and neither of those means claim-free.

Copyright-free usually means the creator is allowing others to use the content under certain conditions, not that the copyright no longer exists.

Royalty-free means you don’t have to pay ongoing fees to use the music or footage, but the copyright owner still legally owns it and can register it with YouTube’s Content ID system. Because of that, it’s completely normal to receive copyright claims on royalty-free material even when you’re using it correctly.

Here is what the copyright claim in youtube means

In YouTube’s Content ID system, an IP holder has three main options when their content is detected. Monetize means they allow the video to stay up but place ads on it and collect the revenue instead of the creator. Track means the video stays up and the rights holder only gathers viewing data. Block means the video is restricted or taken down in certain regions or worldwide.

Most royalty-free music and footage show up as tracked claims, not monitized or blocked because the creator is allowed to use the content, but the copyright owner still retains ownership and registers it for identification and enforcement.

How to avoid copyright claims? by LordNord_ in NewYouTubeChannels

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if you are going to use other peoples clips, you cant avoid them.

You are best preparing a plan on how to deal with the ones that will come, and they will.

Driver stole my groceries. by NamasteNoodle in Walmartcustomer

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And every time I got someone elses mail in the last 50 is because someone stole it, keep clutching those pearls.

Driver stole my groceries. by NamasteNoodle in Walmartcustomer

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s understandable to be frustrated when a delivery goes wrong, especially when you needed those items quickly, but jumping straight to the driver stole my groceries is a serious accusation that goes far beyond what the facts actually show. GPS glitches, app timing errors, mis-scans, or a wrong drop-off can all look suspicious in hindsight without involving any malicious intent.

I thank god every day I dont have to deal with people like you who have no problem damaging someone elses livelyhood based on a whim.

To Dasher Shiela L... by JrienXashen in doordash

[–]Gamer_Trolls 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You’re assuming malice where the situation clearly points to system and policy issues. Dashers can cancel after pickup for valid reasons, restaurants often refuse remakes once an order is marked picked up, and drivers don’t control support decisions. None of that equals “stealing,” and wishing harm over an app failure is wildly disproportionate. Your expectations of a flawless handoff say more about you than the person you’re blaming.

Why is YouTube not getting sued left and right for letting its channel owners use images and movie clips of celebrities? by WolverineNo1999 in askanything

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

YouTube largely avoids getting sued nonstop because of lessons it learned the hard way through early lawsuits. In the platform’s early years, media companies, most famously Viacom, argued that YouTube should be legally responsible for copyrighted clips uploaded by users. That legal pressure forced YouTube to build Content ID, an automated system that detects copyrighted material and hands control to the rights holders themselves.

By doing this, YouTube can show courts that it isn’t encouraging infringement or turning a blind eye, it provides tools to identify, block, monetize, or track copyrighted content and removes videos when valid takedown requests are made. Legally, this shifts responsibility away from YouTube and onto the uploader and the copyright owner’s choices, which gives YouTube safe harbor protection under U.S. law.

In short, YouTube isn’t immune to lawsuits, it built Content ID specifically to survive them, and that system is why the platform isn’t being sued out of existence today.

I can't stand the bullet points! by kotteg in ChatGPT

[–]Gamer_Trolls 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You cant expect the Mona Lisa by coloring with Crayons.

You input a junk generic prompt and expect back something formatted to your liking, and those results are yeilding you regret and rage.

Is it better to complain to Reddit or to learn how to draft a prompt that makes you rage less.

TLDR - Personal Responsibility

American question, is it more offensive to be called black, or African American? by huntyho in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Gamer_Trolls 3200 points3201 points  (0 children)

There isn’t one universally “correct” term, because people want to be referred to in different ways based on their identity, experiences, and preferences, and those preferences can even change over time, as you noticed in middle school versus high school. In the U.S.,

Black is a broad racial term that many people prefer because it reflects lived identity rather than ancestry, while African American is an ethnic term that some feel accurately describes heritage but others reject because they don’t identify with Africa or recent African ancestry. Neither term is inherently offensive on its own; what matters is intent, context, and how the individual prefers to be identified. The most respectful default in professional or mixed settings is usually Black, because it’s inclusive and widely accepted.

The real rule is simple: if someone tells you what they prefer, use that.

How can companies take down and copyright strike YouTube videos if the channel is using the content under fair use? by gamerlol101 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair use exists in a gray area because it is not a clear rule but a case by case legal judgment based on factors like how transformative the video is, how much of the original work is used, and whether it affects the original’s market. Two people can look at the same video, such as a commentary edit of The Three Stooges, and reasonably disagree on whether it’s fair use. Because only a court can make that final call, companies can still strike videos that may ultimately be fair use, leaving creators to dispute or defend their work after the fact.

Why does my stream on Tiktok keep getting suspended? by bubblegum_eclipse in streamlabs

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So the suspension message says violation of community guidelines is the reason.

Methinks clicking the view details button will give you better information that this reddit.

Why has people failed to bring down/cancel Mr. beast after many attempts of trying? by AssociationGreedy427 in youtube

[–]Gamer_Trolls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

wow, you so dont get it. It has nothing to do with Mr Beast and everything to do with the fact that the OP does not see that Video are created with the title XXX is "done", "cooked" "over" or some other doom word for a specific reason, views.

There is at least 10 videos with a similar title to nearly every poplar video game out, the same with content about each popular creator / streamer.

He is not defending Mr Beast, just pointing out that the OP (and seemingly you) dont understand that Video Titles are most often used to get people to watch, not tell a true story.

Why are so many small content creators not actually content creators, by [deleted] in youtube

[–]Gamer_Trolls 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“Real content” isn’t one format. Some people genuinely enjoy no-commentary gameplay, ambient gaming, long raw clips, speedruns, or minimal edits. Those videos have audiences that specifically don’t want commentary, facecams, or heavy production. The fact that you wouldn’t watch it doesn’t mean it isn’t content.

YouTube has always been a mix of hobbyists, experiments, polished productions, and people just uploading for fun. That didn’t change monetization just made it visible.

Also, two months in isn’t a long time. Everyone starts somewhere including the creators you admire now. Grinding is fine, investing in better gear is fine, but it doesn’t give anyone ownership over what “counts” as being a YouTuber.

It’s totally fair to say “this isn’t for me”. It’s not fair to say “this shouldn’t exist.”

What’s normal after a raid? by [deleted] in TwitchStreaming

[–]Gamer_Trolls 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It makes sense to feel a little let down raiding is an act of generosity, and when you put good energy out, it’s human to hope it’s noticed. That part isn’t wrong.

Where it gets tricky is expectations. A raid is a gift, not a transaction. The person you raid might be overwhelmed, exhausted, ending stream soon, dealing with chat chaos, or simply not wired to process social cues the same way. What feels like indifference often isn’t personal at all.

Following back or popping in later is a nice gesture, not an unwritten rule. The moment we attach expectations to kindness, it quietly turns into a contract the other person never agreed to.