Konami Gets YouTube To Take Down Video It Doesn't Like; Streisand Effect Ensures Neverending Discussion Of Video

from the well-that-didn't-work dept

I tend to be able to undestand when smaller companies, or perhaps younger companies, don’t know and understand what the Streisand Effect is and how it works. You can write off this stuff sometimes to inexperience, even if you don’t forgive the censorious actions themselves. But I think it’s fair to say that Konami should know better than to think it could get away with disappearing a YouTube video it didn’t like, yet that’s exactly what Konami did.

Two weeks ago, George “Super Bunnyhop” Weidman published a YouTube video alleging he had information about the ongoing tension between Konami and Hideo Kojima. Now, it’s offline. (In case you missed the drama of the last few months, Kojima and Konami appear to be in the midst of a breakup, even as Kojima finishes work on Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain.)

Now, you can understand why Konami might not want a video about Metal Gear creator Kojima circulating just as the work on the latest iteration of the game series is due to be completed. After all, Kojima is well-known, very popular, and the news that there is some kind of rift between him and Konami might create doubt in customers’ minds about just how much effort is going into this latest game. Add to that the notion that a public breakup with a popular game-designer can probably only hurt Konami’s reputation and it’s easy to get why the company would prefer all of this be buried.

And that’s why taking down this video makes no sense. It not only gets a wider audience talking about the contents of the video, which have been put back up on another YouTube video, but it adds credibility to the claims made within it. After all, if this was all far-fetched speculative nonsense, Konami should have laughed the reports off, not used copyright to silence the video entirely. Use of game footage within the video is sparse at most, making all of this seem like a pure attempt at censorship using intellectual property, which, duh.

Based on Kotaku’s reporting, it should be noted, this is almost certainly a manual takedown, as opposed to a Content ID grab.

There are two ways for a video to disappear from YouTube that doesn’t involve the creator deleting the video. One, there’s YouTube’s Content ID system, which scans videos for copyrighted material. Content ID, however, typically kicks in as soon as the video is uploaded, and wouldn’t normally bring a video down from the service two weeks later. It’s possible but unlikely, as all my interactions with Content ID have occurred very early in the process.

Two, a company purposely (and manually) issues a takedown notice, knowing YouTube will err on the side of rights holders, at least until the issue is resolved. During that time, the video is offline. Companies have used this tactic in the past to suppress videos they didn’t care for.

If the latter is the case with this takedown, it’s quite a misunderstanding of the reaction to censorship of this kind in this day and age. Enjoy all the press that hated video is getting, Konami. You created it all, after all…

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Companies: konami, youtube

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Comments on “Konami Gets YouTube To Take Down Video It Doesn't Like; Streisand Effect Ensures Neverending Discussion Of Video”

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21 Comments
The More You Knew says:

Re: Re:

As it turns out nobody has to be paid to shittalk Konami, because Konami are doing it themselves. With all the plethora of horrifyingly bad things they have done; studios and employees they have harassed and fired, games that got cancelled, people they have blacklisted, and mobile garbage that didn’t sell beyond half a year, on and on and on.. They have now unveiled their final and most apocalyptic of company PR suicide moves. They banned Hideo Kojima, the man, Big Boss, from accepting an award for the very game he made himself. No other gaming company I can recall comes even close to making such horrendous decisions, in quick succession, so massively disconnected from the rest of the world.

Just Another Anonymous Troll says:

Re: This is what really bugs me...

This. Get a DMCA aimed at you? Take down your crap immediately and then debate the merits. Get your Content ID claim disputed (which requires the pushing of a button to get free money with no consequence)? Yeah, you’ve got 30 days to respond to that, and another 30 to file a DMCA if it gets disputed again. Absolutely no debate about who gets the most out of ContentID.

S. T. Stone (profile) says:

The twin snakes of bad publicity and archival actions have come back to bite Konami on the ass. Those who protect free speech — the sons of liberty, if you will — will make sure Konami won’t become a “snake eater” and make this situation disappear. The digital “guns” of such patriots have ensured their revengeance; Konami’s phantom pain has now become a reality from which it cannot escape.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Oh, it’s easy to pretend, as we see so often from the usual shills around here. You just have to accept the fictions that only employees of a major media conglomerate can create anything worthwhile, and that everyone else is acceptable collateral damage.

Once you create your own reality, it’s amazing how many violations of peoples’ rights become acceptable.

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