Lot's of controversy swirling around YouTube lately.  They are serving 100 million videos a day.  People visit to see clips of all kinds, but there is a problem—copyright.  BusinessWeek has a good piece this morning (boy they've had some gems today) on the whole controversy.

Ads by AdGenta.comThese are tough, tough issues.  Does YouTube have the right to claim copyright and distribution of your work just because you use their service?  Are there ways to protect yourself?  Would embedding a CreativeCommons license into the video help?  Would hosting it yourself, but using RedSwoosh to distribute the bandwidth help?

As a company, Qumana believes that you own your content.  That you have the rights to monetize your content.  Your made it so you should reap the benefits.

Seems straightforward to me.

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