Current:Home > ContactLofi Girl disappeared from YouTube and reignited debate over bogus copyright claims -Dynamic Money Growth
Lofi Girl disappeared from YouTube and reignited debate over bogus copyright claims
View
Date:2025-04-19 23:42:49
A young cartoon girl wearing large headphones hunches over a softly lit desk. She's scribbling in a notebook. To her side, a striped orange cat gazes out on a beige cityscape.
The Lofi Girl is an internet icon. The animation plays on a loop on the "lofi hip hop radio — beats to relax/study to" YouTube stream.
It's a 24/7 live stream that plays low-fidelity hip hop music — or lofi for short.
"I would say lofi music is the synthesis of golden era rap aesthetic with the Japanese jazz aesthetics that is then put through this lens of nostalgia," says Hixon Foster, a student and lofi artist.
He describes listening to lofi as a way to escape. Some songs are lonely or melancholy, others remind him of his school years in Michigan and toiling away at homework while listening to tunes.
The genre has become increasingly popular in the last few years. There are countless people making lofi music, fan art, memes, spin-off streams, and Halloween costumes.
Basically, Lofi Girl is everywhere. And with nearly 11 million people subscribed to the channel, the Lofi Girl stream has been the go-to place to find this music.
But last weekend, she went missing. YouTube had taken down the stream due to a false copyright claim.
Fans were not happy.
"There were camps that were confused and camps that were angry," Foster said. "I mainly saw kind of, at least through the lofi Discord, various users being like, 'Oh my God what is this? What's really going on with this?'"
YouTube quickly apologized for the mistake, and the stream returned two days later. But this isn't the first time musicians have been wrongfully shut down on YouTube.
"There's been a lot of examples of copyright going against the ideas of art and artistic evolution," Foster said. "It feels like a lot of the legal practices are going towards stifling artists, which is interesting when the main idea of them is to be protecting them."
The rise of bogus copyright claims
Lofi Girl made it through the ordeal relatively unscathed, but smaller artists who don't have huge platforms may not be so lucky.
"They are at the mercy of people sending abusive takedowns and YouTube's ability to detect and screen for them," said James Grimmelmann, a law professor at Cornell University.
He said false copyright claims were rampant.
"People can use them for extortion or harassment or in some cases to file claims to monetize somebody else's videos," he said.
YouTube gets so many copyright claims that they can't carefully evaluate whether each one is legitimate, Grimmelmann said.
They leave it up to the artist to prove the claims are wrong — sometimes in court — which can be a long process.
Grimmelmann said it's up to Congress to fix copyright law for it to work better for artists. The current laws incentivize YouTube to err on the side of removing artists' content, rather than being precise in their enforcement of copyright claims.
"We ended up with this system because in the 1990s, when the contours of the internet and copyright are still coming into view, this is the compromise that representatives of the copyright industries and the internet industries worked out," Grimmelmann said.
"It's a compromise that hasn't destroyed anybody's business and has made it possible for artists to put their stuff online," Grimmelmann said. "And there has not been the appetite to try to upend that compromise because somebody's ox will get gored if they do."
Luckily, Lofi Girl and her millions of subscribers were able to make a big enough stink to get YouTube's attention quickly and get the issue resolved.
For now, lofi fans can get back to relaxing and studying. Lofi Girl will be right there with you.
veryGood! (86)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- California Activists Redouble Efforts to Hold the Oil Industry Accountable on Neighborhood Drilling
- Environmental Auditors Approve Green Labels for Products Linked to Deforestation and Authoritarian Regimes
- ESPYS 2023 Red Carpet Fashion: See Every Look as the Stars Arrive
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- How RZA Really Feels About Rihanna and A$AP Rocky Naming Their Son After Him
- Nordstrom Anniversary Sale 2023: The Influencers' Breakdown of the Best Early Access Deals
- Barbenheimer opening weekend raked in $235.5 million together — but Barbie box office numbers beat Oppenheimer
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Why Kentucky Is Dead Last for Wind and Solar Production
Ranking
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Selena Gomez's Sister Proves She's Taylor Swift's Biggest Fan With Speak Now-Inspired Hair Transformation
- Travis Barker Praises Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian's Healing Love After 30th Flight Since Plane Crash
- UN Water Conference Highlights a Stubborn Shortage of Global Action
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Josh Hartnett and Wife Tamsin Egerton Step Out for First Red Carpet Date Night in Over a Year
- Eduardo Mendúa, Ecuadorian Who Fought Oil Extraction on Indigenous Land, Is Shot to Death
- Trader Joe's cookies recalled because they may contain rocks
Recommendation
John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
Pregnant Lindsay Lohan Shares Inside Look of Her Totally Fetch Baby Nursery
Police believe there's a lioness on the loose in Berlin
Fossil Fuel Executives See a ‘Golden Age’ for Gas, If They Can Brand It as ‘Clean’
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Tiffany Chen Shares How Partner Robert De Niro Supported Her Amid Bell's Palsy Diagnosis
Illinois Put a Stop to Local Governments’ Ability to Kill Solar and Wind Projects. Will Other Midwestern States Follow?
John Akomfrah’s ‘Purple’ Is Climate Change Art That Asks Audiences to Feel