Cyberpunk 2077's Stream-Safe Setting Option For Its Music Failed To Keep Streamers Safe

Cyberpunk 2077's Stream-Safe Setting Option For Its Music Failed To Keep Streamers Safe

3 years ago
Anonymous $y15ULlV7sG

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20201211/10025045870/cyberpunk-2077s-stream-safe-setting-option-music-failed-to-keep-streamers-safe.shtml

In November, as we were finally coming to the day when CD Projekt Red's newest opus, Cyberpunk 2077, was going to be released to the world, we wrote about how the developer had included a setting for the game specifically to keep streamers safe from copyright strikes. Essentially, the setting was meant to strip out all licensed music from the game and replace it with music that wouldn't land streamers in copyright jail while doing let's-plays. On the one hand, it was nice to see a developer so in favor of having its games streamed do this sort of thing. On the other hand, the fact that CD Projekt Red had to do so showed both what a failure Amazon/Twitch and the like have been at supporting their streamers through music licensing deals and, more importantly, what a hellscape copyright enforcement has become that all of this was even necessary.

Well, as it turns out, that hellscape is so complete that even the game's stream-safe setting failed to keep streamers safe.

Cyberpunk 2077's Stream-Safe Setting Option For Its Music Failed To Keep Streamers Safe

Dec 12, 2020, 4:14am UTC
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20201211/10025045870/cyberpunk-2077s-stream-safe-setting-option-music-failed-to-keep-streamers-safe.shtml > In November, as we were finally coming to the day when CD Projekt Red's newest opus, Cyberpunk 2077, was going to be released to the world, we wrote about how the developer had included a setting for the game specifically to keep streamers safe from copyright strikes. Essentially, the setting was meant to strip out all licensed music from the game and replace it with music that wouldn't land streamers in copyright jail while doing let's-plays. On the one hand, it was nice to see a developer so in favor of having its games streamed do this sort of thing. On the other hand, the fact that CD Projekt Red had to do so showed both what a failure Amazon/Twitch and the like have been at supporting their streamers through music licensing deals and, more importantly, what a hellscape copyright enforcement has become that all of this was even necessary. > Well, as it turns out, that hellscape is so complete that even the game's stream-safe setting failed to keep streamers safe.