I got tired of arguing the rights of a couple 300 year old classical songs performed by independent artists on the video. So I deleted the video, edited out the few songs still in dispute, & re-posted it. It's about 5 minutes shorter than the original now.
The songs were classical public domain recordings from the Library of Congress. They were performed & recorded by independent artists funded by taxpayer or university money to be intended as public domain material free for everybody.
But there are copyright scammers that literally copy public domain works to put on a CD or distribute for money as an mp3. Then these scammers claim copyrights to the public domain material just because they decided to copy & sell it, when they really have no rights to it. Basically anybody can copy public domain recordings onto a CD or sell mp3s of them at Amazon or other places, but that doesn't automatically give them rights to it. They are actually stealing the material from the public domain, & then claiming ownership or rights to it as a distributor or owner of the recording.
This would be like somebody copying the stories at our story page for their own site, or a book, registering themselves as the owner or publisher or author, then suing us for carrying the stories, or ordering us to remove them (which by the way, has happened a couple of times, & I had to get an attorney).
The battle against these false copyright claims is long & tedious. Even with proof on hand, many of them refuse to back off of their claims, putting my accounts, domains, sites, & job in jeopardy. I find most of the time it's Russian mobsters or other hoodlums that are copying public domain or other material, slapping their own or a fake name on them, then registering a copyright for them. Then everybody who uses that material has to pay them rights, or run ads & credits for their "publisher".
Then on the Temple slideshow, even Time Warner sent me a copyright notice claiming I used a soundtrack they own from a movie. Although the song may have been used in a movie, it was written almost 400 years ago. The recording I used was a performance of the song, performed & recorded locally at the University of Buffalo in the late 1980s. I actually had possession of some of the university concert reel tapes for a while, & we (with WBFO radio) were responsible for converting them to wav & mp3 formats in the late 1990s to preserve them for everyone.
These were always intended to be public domain recordings of the performances, funded by taxpayers & the university for anybody to have or copy for free. Volunteers like me & others copied them to wav & mp3s to preserve them from the deteriorating reels of tapes. The files were then distributed back to local libraries & universities in digital form for everybody to use or copy. We even uploaded copies to the wayback/archive site. Before digital formats, cassettes tapes of them were available at many local libraries & universities to borrow, while the master reel tapes were kept to make new copies.
But it took over a month for Time Warner to back off their claim of rights to the song. Thousands have performed & recorded old classical songs. Just because one records & distributes a performance of an old classical piece hundreds of years old, doesn't give them rights to every performance, recording, & copy of the song. They may own the recording used for the movie, but they don't own other recordings & performances of the very old song.
Anywho, I got 18 music copyright violations & copyright threats for the Panties Slideshow. I fought them all. With 2 remaining, who refused to back down, I decided to edit out the 2 remaining disputed songs by Bach & Mozart rather than fight it anymore or have these crooks continue to make money running their own ads over the video.