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by addandsubtract
1186 days ago
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But Germans also tend to play it very German. They will have the "Werbevideo" notice, because they're reviewing a product that was provided to them, for example. Anyone outside of Germany probably wouldn't see that as a sponsorship, and sometimes I feel it waters down the point of the disclaimer if _every_ video is a "Werbevideo", but you don't know to what extent they are actually sponsored. |
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It's similar to how a lot of "disruptions" in the startup space work (gig economy, "sharing" economy, crypto, AI, etc): find a niche that lacks established legal precedents, do obviously illegal things in that niche, make a profit to cash out the investors, get fined as laws and court rulings catch up, rinse and repeat.
Can't operate a taxi without a license? They're not cabbies, they're independent contractors.
Renting residential homes out as vacation homes would violate zoning laws? They're not vacation home rentals, they're "spare guest rooms" rented out by private individuals.
Can't afford to pay delivery drivers? They're not entitled to a minimum wage because they're now independent contractors of a delivery startup with a catchy name.
Scalping tickets, parking spaces and restaurant seats is illegal? It's not scalping, it's a universal digital assistant.
Can't sell meme stocks directly to clueless retail investors? They're not stocks, they're coins and NFTs.
Can't discriminate against marginalized people? It's not discrimination when the machine learning algorithm made the decision based on prejudices in the training data.
Have to pay royalties to use a picture you like? It's no longer the same picture if you launder it through an AI image generation model that used it as training data.