>>4950303"Fair use" wouldn't protect them from a US based suit either because it is
> the doctrine that brief excerpts of copyright material may, under certain circumstances, be quoted verbatim for purposes such as criticism, news reporting, teaching, and research, without the need for permission from or payment to the copyright holder.Have a video game online course and show excerpts of Quake 2 to illustrate what "rocket jump" means and what is the physics and coding behind it?
>fair use due to the use of a short excerpt in an educational circumstanceStream a 2.5 hours walkthrough of the same game to entertain your audience?
>not fair useSample a 10 seconds "dum dum dum dum DUM DUM dum dum" for your breakout hit song from some acclaimed artist hit song?
>not fair useand costed Vanilla Ice a lot of money because Queen sued him and would have beat him in court had him not settled for some hefty undisclosed sum
https://www.thethings.com/artist-who-copied-queen/Copyright law is the simplest in the world
>you made it? You control who can make copies and nobody can without your permission>you didn't make it? You need permission from whoever didThe difference between Japan and the US is not law but culture
>Americans see value in their products to reach an audience as wide as possible, turning a blind eye to copyright infringement when the purpose is not to profit over their work but to add value somehow>Nips consider using things that do not belong to you a very serious social matter with guaranteed punishment for non complianceYou don't need to go too far to see an example of that:
>Ollie almost got herself in a whole of trouble with that stunt of pretending to steal diamonds from Usada Trade Center on FUCKING MINECRAFT when Moona first took her there.Moona fulfilled the social expectation by swiftly punishing Ollie otherwise she would more likely than not have got herself in trouble right off the bat with the nip audience.
(She ended up having to apologize off stream anyway to calm the hottest heads down)