Over the past weekend, Internet pop sensation Justin Bieber went to upload the music video of his new song called “Pray” to his personal YouTube site.  He was in for a rude surprise: YouTube automatically blocked his video  upload on “copyright grounds” that the video contained content from  Universal Music Group (UMG), parent company to Bieber’s record label,  Island Def Jam records.
“yo youtube…how u gonna block my own song?!?!?!” wrote an outraged Bieber on his Twitter account.  In another Twitter update, he wrote, “dear youtube…we started this  journey and now u r cheatin on me with this vevo chica…i see how it is…i  will be over here with facebook [sic].” (Vevo  is the music video website responsible for Bieber’s official YouTube  syndication, and is a joint venture between music giants Sony Music  Entertainment, UMG and Abu Dhabi Media.)
In response, YouTube wrote back to Bieber on its Twitter account,  “sorry about the upload pain around ‘Pray’. That’s between you and your  label but we love you [both] so let’s figure this out!”
But the damage was done. Frustrated with the Google-owned video site,  Bieber instead uploaded his video using Facebook’s video app onto his Facebook page. “no one keeps my music from my fans. nobody,” he wrote on Twitter.
There’s a level of irony to the situation. Bieber got his start on  YouTube, where home videos of him on his account singing covers of  hip-hop songs from artists Usher and Chris Brown attracted the attention  of a talent scout in 2007. After a meteoric rise to fame, Bieber is one  of the biggest YouTube stars today, the second to reach 1 billion views on the Google-owned video site, behind Lady Gaga.
You would think if anyone deserved to be able to upload his own music  videos to YouTube, it would be Bieber. So why couldn’t he? The answer  lies in the complicated legalities behind copyright law and new media.  It comes down to the question: who owns the video? In Bieber’s case, the  answer depends on who you ask.
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