1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

No more GEMA 'blocking banners' on YouTube

November 1, 2016

Video platform YouTube and rights collection society GEMA have struck a license agreement after long negotiations. The deal means music fans in Germany can see more videos - and artists get paid.

https://p.dw.com/p/2RyLx
YouTube vs Gema Rechtsstreit
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

The internet video platform YouTube and the German rights collection society GEMA have reached a deal under which artists who are GEMA members will receive payment when one of their videos is viewed, both sides announced on Tuesday.

The agreement also brings an end to the red "blocking banners" notifying users in Germany that access to their favorite music was banned for copyright reasons.

Screenshot Youtube Gema
German music users will no longer face this sightImage: youtube

YouTube called the deal a "pioneering agreement," saying that it would enable music fans in Germany "to enjoy even more of their favorite songs on YouTube as of now."

It said the artists represented by GEMA would also benefit both from using the platform as a way of reaching "new fans," and from payments received every time one of their videos is accessed. According to the online version of the daily "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung," both sides have agreed not to reveal the amount paid for each view.

Banners down

Thomas Theune from GEMA told the paper that the agreement was a milestone" that "at last [secures] some 70,000 composers, lyric writers and publishers a share in the use of their intellectual creations on YouTube."

YouTube, which is run by Google, and GEMA had been involved in a legal battle over copyright issues for years after a previous license agreement expired in 2009.

The "blocking banners" disappeared early on Tuesday morning, to the doubtless relief of music lovers in Germany who for years have been frustrated at not being able to access all the videos available on YouTube in other countries.

This popular video by South Korean artist Psy, for example, is now free to enjoy by all.

tj/sms (dpa, AFP)