Lesiem is a German group and the song I am Brave is not listed on there Wikipedia so it could be a leaked song and they put it on YouTube as a way to try to take down any video that uploads the leak.
What seems strange is that this "Lesiëm" was active from 1999 to 2005. The track "I am brave" is dated February 2023.
Maybe it got leaked and they never wanted to release it and now they copy striking anyone who puts it up? Maybe they haven't released it yet and it's secretly got the link leaked and some people watched it and they wanted it blocked?
Possible, but it doesn't explain why it would happen on such a large scale. And the two videos I linked are from 2022 and 2023. It doesn't seem like whoever made it was ever going to release it.
Also, whoever created those tracks would not benefit from keeping it to themselves forever.
There is also a slight possibility that those geo-blocked music tracks are stolen themselves.
My guess is that they want no body to listen to there music so they have it set up to copy strike and remove every video YouTube finds that has there music in it. From what I saw it was a video where only people with the link can see it and that it's unavailable.
If no one can access their music, no one is able to use their music in first place.
And how would these people benefit from no one being able to use their music?
The July Jannington video has 401 views, so it was non-blocked at some point.
Why would someone put work into creating a soundtrack just for a few hundred views?
EDIT: I used a region look up site and Allowed countries Somaliland Kosovo N. Cyprus
Interesting. Which tool did you use? (You already answered it, thanks.)
I tried views4you, but it doesn't list any countries.
Last Edit: May 31, 2024 23:26:11 GMT by gordon: already answered
The link is broken on the site and here, only YoshiKiller2S can fix the one on the site.
he can't. I have had the exact same thing happen to a link I have sent before and it's unfixable
Whoever needs it can use the short URL via archive.today: archive.today/Fs3aP.
Sadly, the other pictures on the page are lost media because the Wayback Machine did not pick them up, and it is very unlikely that anyone has preserved them. It would have been exciting to see other pictures from the original backrooms.
I have an impression that the walls were originally grey-ish and the yellow tint comes from the white balance of the camera.
In September 2017, Linus Sebastian from Techquickie made this live stream responding to criticism for their then new "thank you for watching Techquickie!" intro at the beginning.
If you have URLs for more live streams, please post them here.
Gio (Giovanni Gartner, born 1990) is a German rapper who mainly gained fame through YouTube, especially in 2014 where he secured the second rank (his debrief) in "Julien's Blog Battle", a rap battle organized by "Julien's Blog" who has over a million subscribers, and his 2015 diss track against "Liont TV". Liont (Timoteo) had lots of views back then but not anymore.
Giovanni joined YouTube as early as 2006, predating the YouTube duopoly of "Bibi's Beauty Palace" (inactive since 2022) and "Julien Bam" by half a decade.
As with many personalities who rise to fame, Giovanni has purged some of his early stuff. However, compared to other major personalities like "ApoRed" and "Julienco", he has purged surprisingly little of his past.
Non-lost media
In his teenage years (late 2000s decade), it appears Giovanni had a girlfriend named Jessica. During that time, he made a love song for her that he took down at some point, but a reupload from 2013 exists. The breakup song from January 2010 is still online.
Lost media
From 2011 to 2013, he made a series named "Frag' den Rapper" ("ask the rapper", playlist), where he uses rap to answer questions by his audience. They include joke questions such as "why did you run over Santa Claus?" (in a video game).
Out of the eight videos in the playlist, the two earliest ones are privated. A 2016 channel archive shows they were still on air back then.
Last Edit: May 31, 2024 19:44:33 GMT by gordon: added question mark
There is a slight possibility, although I believe the orange-haired female looked somewhat different and very likely had freckles.
What I clearly remember is that there was an episode when their vehicle ran out of fuel and the fuel meter was shown with the pointer towards "E" (empty), and I think the intro song had a voice singing "na na na na na na na na na na na" (melody: 333-34-43-2-1-3-3).
Atomic Betty maybe. Her Starcruiser could turn into a van and a submarine. The show is sort of obscure so I can understand why it might be not easy to recognize or remember.
Rather unlikely. I think the protagonist looked different than her. Higher body-to-head ratio.
I […] will find a way to make it so that the original owners cannot take it down.
Lobbying DMCA out of existence.
Almost no one in the USA wanted DMCA law to begin with. It was spontaneously decided by a bunch of bureaucrats. The majority of Americans had no say in it.
Last Edit: May 30, 2024 22:12:12 GMT by gordon: quote fix
How I wish that someone who works at Google could just release all those historically relevant deleted videos to the public. (They are likely not allowed to.)
Iván has already lost a channel in 2016. It was first upload-disabled in February and then terminated in July of that year. (story)
Besides his Angry German Kid series, he also made some spin-off content like "Top 15 AGK parodists" (also long gone, as you might have guessed).
The possibility of having an entire channel with all its content nuked due to strikes on a tiny fraction of videos makes YouTube hostile to long-term archival. A wise man once said something along the lines of "Google is an archive in the same way a supermarket is a food museum".
In the 2000s, there was a cartoon series where the protagonist was an orange-haired female and they had a van that could transform into a rubber boat with the press of a button.