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“Glad You Asked” is an ensemble-led exploration of topics driven by our curiosity about the world around us. YouTube Premium subscribers have access to all five episodes beginning today.
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The first episode in the new installment - which raises the question, “ Do I want kids?” - is now available to stream for free on the Vox YouTube channel, with new episodes dropping weekly. These five new topical episodes examine the intersection between health and social issues more broadly.
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Today, Vox and Vox Media Studios with YouTube Originals Emmy-nominated series “Glad You Asked” returned with brand new episodes. We are very concerned that your copyright notification may not be valid for some or all of the videos identified in your notification.Watch New Episodes Weekly Beginning Today Only on Vox’s YouTube Channel YT sent me a copy of the email they sent to The Verge. I've linked below a couple other great videos that are being critical of the original video and seeing how many views they have, I can see why Vox Media is concerned about the image of The Verge, but someone should introduce them to the Streisand Effect. The works of Kyle and others are clearly within fair use and are transformative works of the original.
The problem here is that Vox Media, regardless of what Pokimane may think, is not well within their rights as a content creator to do this. This wasn't some random hit caught by an algorithm, it was a targeted hit by Vox Media who manually opted to do this. They have hit him with a copyright strike on his YouTube channel over the video that he did.
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Welp, just removed the "Lyle Reacts to the Verge's PC Build Video" claiming copyright violation and without warning, felt that was deserving of a strike against the channel. The first victim is Kyle of Bitwit who used his caricature Lyle to lambaste The Verge's video. The problem today stems from the fact that Vox Media appears to be now trying to scrub the internet of the video by going after critical TechTubers and other YouTubers who made fun of them. While it was an entertaining video to say the least, I'm glad it was removed so that no newcomer to the custom PC world would have accidentally followed their poor building advice. Vox Media, parent company of The Verge, has long since deleted the video after a massive amount of backlash and mockery.
I quit trying to defend anyone when the host went on his own live stream to attack the critics, calling them 'computer trolls who are mad they don't have a computer as good as him'. But, this wasn't a community piece to help people, it was a paid advertisement by a credit card company, so production value over content value appeared to be the case.
After all, there were numerous people involved in this project from directors to editors, someone should have caught the inconsistency and misinformation at some point in the chain. Initially I defended the host since I know sometimes in corporate climates people tend to get put in front of things by someone elses doings.
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I'm all for anyone helping people get into PC building and gaming after all, but when they broke out the 'Live Strong' anti-static wrist band and the zip tie tweezers I knew we had a whole pile of misinformation on here.
The video they made was well produced and started out as a well meaning tutorial. I caught wind of it the day after it posted, after seeing memes begin popping up around Twitter and Reddit, so I decided to check it out myself. As much as The Verge tried, they simply could not live strong with what they had done. Back in September, The Verge released a Gaming PC Build Guide on YouTube and it went viral, but for all the wrong reasons.