Anyways... I get that he's mad that Content ID took his monies away, but what I don't get is why he doesn't just do Nintendo's creator program? That's, like, the only way to legally monetize YouTube videos of their games, right? Why did he blatantly monetize the video, despite not being in Nintendo's creator program, and despite knowing this would happen because of it? Also, it was super childish of him to take down the video. Can't you appeal Content ID flags? Couldn't he join Nintendo's creator program? Nah, just take the video down cuz Nintendo made me mad.
That's another thing about this whole ordeal... Was this even Nintendo's fault? As far as I know, Nintendo had nothing to do with the flag, other than that they uploaded footage of MP10 to their channel, which Content ID then uses to flag videos. AJ didn't even give Nintendo a chance to say anything or do anything about it, he just flipped out as soon as it happened. It would be like me making a fancy drink for someone ("someone" being Angry Joe), putting it on the table in from of them and saying, "Don't shake the table or it'll spill." They proceed to shake the table vigorously and, surprise surprise, it spills all over. Then they instantly get mad at me, even though they broke the rules, and I didn't even cause the incident.
Now, I haven't watched the MP10 video, so I don't know how much valuable input he provided, but it does sound like it was basically an excerpt from a casual stream from his Twitch, not the most riveting and insightful thing. But like I said, I didn't watch it, so I'm not sure on that. Not necessarily saying that should have bearing on whether it gets flagged or not, but I'd have a lot more sympathy for Joe if the video was like a 10-15 minute review or something.
Either way, It is Nintendo's decision to use Content ID (I think it is, right?) and to have the creator program, and it's perfectly fine and legal for them to do so. Just like it's fine for Joe to pull his video. I just don't have much sympathy for Joe when he blatantly broke the rules and got mad when he was punished for it.
I suppose it is likely that he knew about it, if that is the case then this strategy seems to have worked for him.
I don't disagree with his message though. Nintendo's YouTube policies, while of course completely up to Nintendo, aren't something any other gaming company does. Sure, YouTubers are lucky to be making money from what is mostly playing games but the way Nintendo feels entitled to take a cut of the money is just off putting. Why does Nintendo feel entitled to a cut of the ad revenue while all the other companies just enjoy the free promotion these YouTubers give their games?
It being flagged automatically is irrelevant. It doesn't negate the fact that it's Nintendo's policies that are what caused this.
Yeah, Angry Joe doesn't seem to make much Nintendo related content but it's not surprising when this is what I assume he does for a living. Nintendo's policies encourage less people to make Nintendo content, they want to make some extra money at the expense of increasing their online communities. If I were to monetise my YouTube account I would either do no or very few Nintendo videos because it would be much more beneficial for me to make content for other games. It's probably the way this discourages growth and creation of new Nintendo online communities and projects as well as how Nintendo is the only one doing this that makes this sit badly with me.