by Ellen Seidler | Copyright
Why doesn’t YouTube make it easier for people to work things out when there’s a dispute over content?
Every week it seems there’s a new headline bemoaning content that has been mistakenly removed from YouTube due to bogus copyright claims. This so-called “takedown abuse” makes for good headlines, but per usual, there’s much more to the story of what happens behind-the-scenes on YouTube with various types of claims on copyrighted content.
Perhaps in reaction to some of these inflammatory headlines, YouTube recently announced it was creating a team dedicated to “minimize mistakes” when videos are removed from the site. The announcement came via a post on Google’s own blog:
…Recently, there’s been a lot of discussion about the enforcement of our policies, from video takedowns to channel demonetization. We want you to know that we monitor video takedowns very closely, and while we haven’t seen a big change in the overall rate of removals, it’s true that we do make mistakes. For this, we’re sorry and we strive to do better by you, our community.
The good news is that the feedback you’ve raised in comments and videos on YouTube and beyond is having an impact. It’s caused us to look closely at our policies and helped us identify areas where we can get better. It’s led us to create a team dedicated to minimizing mistakes and improving the quality of our actions. And it’s encouraged us to roll out some initiatives in the coming months that will help strengthen communications between creators and YouTube support. We’ll also make improvements to increase transparency into the status of monetization claims. And of course, as we work to implement these improvements as quickly as we can, we’ll continue to take your feedback seriously.
— Spencer from YouTube’s Policy Team
Improving “transparency” on YouTube’s Content ID System would across the board is needed
Unfortunately, YouTube’s new initiative seems only to address “transparency” having to do with monetization claims, not Content ID in general. Content ID is the fingerprinting system that YouTube established to help rights holders protect their creative work from online piracy. Though imperfect, it’s certainly better than nothing but there are many ways to improve it.
If the YouTube team is serious about improving the way Content ID works it could help fix what’s broken is by increasing transparency throughout the system, particularly when it comes to disputes over how content is claimed.
In particular, I’d suggest a simple fix that would benefit both copyright holders and YouTube uploaders–allow people to communicate directly when Content ID claims are disputed. If this happened, many misunderstandings could be worked out to the satisfaction of everyone involved.
I’ll give you an example. Let’s say you have a film and someone uploads some scenes from it that are matched via Content ID. It’s a clip that lasts, only several minutes in length and you’ve set up Content ID to match and monetize clips of this length. The matched content is not commentary or a review, only a mashup of scenes taken from your film. You receive notification via your Content ID dashboard that the uploader has “disputed” your monetization claim. (Never mind that this doesn’t involve a takedown, only monetization of the clip).
You take a look at the claim and the justification for filing the dispute. It says:
Reason: All non-original content is in the public domain
Note: Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use”; for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
Ok, clearly there’s some confusion here. First of all, the uploaded clip is NOT in the “public domain” –it’s surprising how often I see this justification and how many people don’t have a clue as to what it actually means–and secondly, there’s no real criticism, comment, news reporting, etc. going on with the excerpt.
Even so, you have no wish to actually remove the clip from YouTube, only claim it and monetize it. Seems reasonable right? Well, in this case, the sender does not allow messages to be sent (via her channel) and no email is provided so there’s no way to contact her to explain the situation. You only want ads to appear with the video (to help you pay down that production debt)–not remove or block it. In this case the only recourse is to “reinstate” the claim and hope the uploader doesn’t file–what would be–a bogus counter-notice.

YouTube user disputed monetization claim with erroneous justification
Why doesn’t YouTube provide a way for parties to contact each other?
All this confusion could be avoided IF there was simply a way for both parties to discuss things. Why doesn’t YouTube, as part of this dispute form, allow the recipient to send a message to the uploader who disputed the claim. Personal information could be protected, BUT a conversation (via email or message) could be had and most likely clear up any confusion over the claim.
As shown in example below, this uploader who filed a dispute doesn’t have a contact sender option on her YouTube channel. In this scenario the rights holder’s only recourse would be to do nothing OR reinstate the claim and risk further misunderstanding.

Not every dispute needs to escalate
Because there’s no way to have a dialogue these situations often escalate into an actual counter-notice being filed. It’s ironic that at that point the party that files a counter-notice has to provide accurate contact info. Of course, many do not but that’s a post for another day. When a dispute reaches this level, the only way for the rights holder to keep their work off YouTube is to spend money and file in federal court.
For most indie creators, this is where the story ends. Their content goes back up on YouTube and nothing more can be done. For all the talk of abusive takedowns, there’s not much press coverage for the ongoing problem of abusive (and false) counter-notices.
Bottom line, in many cases, folks could simply work things out if YouTube made it easier to communicate. Seems like a simple move. Can’t we just all try to get along?
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by Ellen Seidler | Copyright, Film, Google, Law
YouTube will pay copyright court costs for a few users–not because it’s right–but to protect Google’s bottom line
According to a story in the NY Times, the folks at YouTube are ready to pony up cash to support some of its users “fair use” claims in court.
YouTube said on Thursday that it would pick up the legal costs of a handful of video creators that the company thinks are the targets of unfair takedown demands. It said the creators it chose legally use third-party content under “fair use” provisions carved out for commentary, criticism, news and parody.
You’ve probably read a lot about “fair use” lately. It’s the Google-funded (EFF) Electronic Frontier Foundation’s mantra and if the folks there had their way, pretty much everything and anything would be considered “fair use.” Fair use an important legal doctrine and when applied properly (criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research) is not an infringement of copyright. However, these days, too often it’s used as a disingenuous defense for copyright theft.
The tech-funded campaign to turn villains into victims
When a court recently ruled that a snippet of a Prince song playing in the background of a YouTube video in the notorious Dancing Baby case was indeed “fair use,”it gave a boost to efforts to use fair use as a cudgel against rights holders who legitimately assert their rights using the DMCA takedown process.
Note that the actual video at the center of this case was reposted after the uploader sent a counter-notice. The only reason the case ended up in court was because the uploader, Stephanie Lenz, filed suit and the only reason she did so was because she was bankrolled by the EFF. The EFF saw it as an opportunity to advance its Google-funded agenda. As Terry Hart noted in 2010 on his Copyhype blog:
Luckily, our society has survived the brief time when Lenz’s video was not available to the world. But does this episode only highlight the DMCA’s sword of Damocles hanging over free speech and creativity? Or is it just another example of the cries of internet freedom fighters that the sky is falling as content industries adapt to technological changes? I think it’s the latter: despite the elevation of this dancing baby video to a cause célèbre, our freedom to speak is not threatened, and any “burden” the DMCA places on users uploading content is almost illusory.
With this YouTube gambit–which Jonathan Bailey breaks down in a blog post on Plagiarism Today–one can imagine that EFF is chomping at the bit to find yet another test case to take to court in an effort to expand the definition of fair use beyond those prescribed by current copyright law.
At last weeks House Judiciary committee copyright roundtable in Santa Clara the term “fair use” was bandied about repeatedly. At some point a panelist complained that bogus DMCAs made up more than half the takedowns sent. NOT TRUE!
Legit DMCA takedowns on Google outnumber false ones by a huge margin–97% to 3%.
The EFF and their compatriots routinely like to assert that every day, everywhere, poor innocent uploaders are being damaged by DMCA takedowns on YouTube and elsewhere. Give me a break. The fact is that creators victimized by piracy, forced into the time-consuming process of sending DMCA notices to protect their work, FAR outnumber users victimized by erroneous DMCA takedowns. According to the most recent numbers I could find (via Google’s transparency report) the company “removed 97% of search results specified in requests that we received between July and December 2011.”
I have to give the EFF and its well-paid attorneys credit though. They have successfully made the victims into villains through an ongoing campaign of carefully crafted rhetoric. Never mind the actual truth–that for every “bogus” and “absurd” takedown sent there are thousands that are legit. Sadly it’s a fact that gets lost on most of the public and very likely some of the politicians considering copyright reform that were sitting in that room.
Hey YouTube! What about covering legal costs of creators who receive bogus counter-notices?
Yes Virginia, not every counter-notice in response to a DMCA takedown sent is legitimate. It’s a fact that creators who send a legitimate DMCA notice, to remove full copies of a film from YouTube for example (no debate about fair use here) have received a counter-notice from the uploader.
I wrote about this specific scenario in a blog post “How DMCA Abuse Hurts Creators” in 2013. In this case the uploader had zero right to upload the film, but because she sent a counter-notice, YouTube put the full copy of the film back online.

This film was reposted (in its entirety) to YouTube after the uploader sent a counter-notice. The filmmakers’ only recourse is to go to court. Will YouTube cover those costs?
What now? The only recourse the user has is to go to court. Is YouTube willing to cover those court costs? Will YouTube step up to protect rights holders whose work is ripped off on their site? The answer is a simple, NO.
YouTube’s move is not about doing what’s right, or protecting legal rights. It’s about protecting Google’s bottom line. YouTube depends on fresh content to drive traffic to its site. From a business perspective, it makes total sense to streamline that path from any speed bumps along the way, including those pesky copyright claims.

DMCA does not work well for creators trying to protect their work from online theft
The DMCA is broken, but not in the way the EFF would have you think. It’s broken because it does a lousy job protecting the work of filmmakers, musicians, photographers, and authors.
Over these past few years I’ve written plenty on the subject so if you’re so inclined, you can a sampling of some of my other posts that explore why the DMCA needs fixing:
Dancing around DMCA Takedowns on YouTube
Using DMCA to fight Ashley Madison hackers is poor use of copyright law
Google lives on tech’s cutting edge–but in DMCA takedown Luddite-land
Why does Google play a DMCA piracy shell game?
Does Chilling Effects make a mockery of the DMCA?
Etsy uses DMCA “safe harbor” to protect photography pirates
Google and the Art of the DMCA Dawdle
Google’s Blogger DMCA takedown procedures a hot mess
Everyone hates the DMCA
Is this really what Congress had in mind when it created the DMCA?
How DMCA Abuse Hurts Content Creators
Hollywood and Silicon Valley talk distribution, DMCA, and more during panel on piracy
The RIAA Explains Why DMCA doesn’t work
Nickel and Dimed to Death? Pirates Profit off DMCA Requests
Anti-copyright Astroturf gangs, fertilized with tech cash, suddenly sprout
Google’s downranking of pirate sites is a big, fat, LIE
Google’s 100 Million Takedowns-A Mess of its Own Making
Chilling Effects (still) makes searching for pirate links easy
Pirate Bay shut down-Is it a sign of progress against piracy’s “free for me” mantra?
Piracy for profit-YouTube’s dirty secret
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) uses copyright law as censorship canard again
Google’s demotion of pirate search results earns a FAIL so far
Should we trust Google’s piracy report? Probably not….
Google gets called out (again) for its laissez faire attitude on piracy
Google’s “We fight piracy” Gobbledygook
Raise your hand if you’re tired of EFF tech-funded talking points
Google’s piracy profit machine continues unchecked
Busting Piracy on Google’s Blogger Barnacle Sites
Free Speech According to Google? Blackmailing Indie Music Labels Over YouTube Streaming?
Piracy’s Potpourri of Profit and Prevarication
Record Share Price Aside, Google Still has a Piracy Problem
Search Engines = G.P.S. for Online Piracy
How Google (Doesn’t) Fight Piracy
LGBT Cinema, Diverse Voices Quieted by Piracy’s Punch?
Google and friends spin search piracy study
YouTube’s Paid Channels are Here and a Counterfeit Cleanup is Past Due
by Ellen Seidler | Ad Sponsored Piracy, Piracy
Is online ad industry becoming more accountable? Yep, but there’s still (much) more to be done.
Some good news on the ongoing fight against ad sponsored piracy. Today, Group M, a major player in global media investment announced efforts to ensure that their media partners become certified providers of, or follow anti-piracy advertising guidelines established by the Trustworthy Accountability Group’s (TAG). John Montgomery, Chairman, GroupM Connect, North America and Co-Chair of the TAG Anti-Piracy Working Group characterized the move as a big step forward in the fight against ad-sponsored online piracy:
We’re in the business of giving the world’s most valuable brands marketing advantage with smart media strategies. This inherently means we’re vigilant for clients’ brand safety. Our work with TAG in the development and now full adoption of anti-piracy guidelines is a major leap forward…Fighting pirates of copyrighted content required every ounce of our tenacity and ingenuity, but with the advent of TAG’s Brand Integrity Program Against Piracy, we have powerful new tools and safeguards.”
TAG’s announcement of its anti-piracy initiative last February was received as positive news by those leading the battle against online theft.
“We are glad to see brands taking the initiative to deploy validated tools and technologies to keep their ads off of infringing sites…While this is an important first step, ultimate success will require widespread adoption by advertisers, ad agencies, and ad placement entities. Consumers and creators should continue to monitor this issue and encourage brands and ad tech companies to do the right thing.” -Sandra Aistars, Chief Executive Officer of the Copyright Alliance,
It’s also worth noting that TAG’s certification process–included as part of GroupM’s new standards–will require actual proof of compliance to standards in order to be validated.
Through the program, providers of anti-piracy tools and services will be validated as Digital Advertising Assurance Providers (DAAPs) by independent third-parties including Stroz Friedberg and Ernst & Young, working with TAG. To be validated, DAAP companies must show how they identify risky sites, prevent ad placement, disrupt site transactions, monitor and assess the safety of ad placements, and/or prevent payment to sites that are deemed likely to offer pirated content or counterfeit goods. The first validated DAAPs are expected to be named in Q3 2015, and GroupM will require that all of its partners receive such validation by Q1 2016.
When it comes to the fight against online piracy any news is good news, but unfortunately there’s still much work to be done. As I’ve argued for more than five years, cutting of the blood supply that incentivizes and sustains online pirates is crucial if we are going to turn the tide against out of control online theft for profit.
What about the other online advertising elephant in the room?
Stopping advertisers from putting cash into the pockets of notorious pirate websites around the globe is one thing, but what is TAG doing about ad placement on supposedly legit sites like YouTube? Is YouTube considered a “risky site” and if not, why not?
This past month I’ve questioned why major advertisers are so lackadaisical about ad placements on questionable YouTube content that includes pirated movies, clips of live-TV murders, (RATS) spyware, or terrorist recruiting videos.
At the time of TAG’s announcement last February, Linda Woolley, its President and CEO, was quoted in a press release:
It is critical that online advertisers be able to protect themselves from potential brand damage from piracy, fraud, and malware and safeguard their marketing investments. This initiative will help marketers identify sites that present an unacceptable risk of misappropriating copyrighted content and selling counterfeit goods, and it will help them remove those sites from their advertising distribution chain.
In that same press release, GroupM’s Montgomery noted:
“An advertiser’s brand is its most precious possession, and this program will help us ensure that our clients’ brands are not put at risk through unintentional placement on sites that promote pirated content, counterfeit goods, or other illegal activities. We look forward to working with TAG on this and other programs to help strengthen the advertising ecosystem by addressing systemic problems like piracy, malware, fraud, and lack of transparency.”
If protecting an “advertiser’s brand” as its “most precious possession” is truly a priority perhaps TAG-certified providers should also expand its focus to include sites like YouTube, a virtual cornucopia of monetized garbage that makes major brands look bad. Not only is placement of ads next to questionable content routine, but both the uploaders of questionable content AND YouTube are making money off it.
In June of 2014 I wrote a post, “Enough Playing Nice with the Advertising Industry over Ad Sponsored Piracy” in which I made this observation in response Creative Future’s letter to ad industry executives praising their efforts against ad sponsored piracy:
Of course some action against ad-sponsored piracy is better than none, but news flash, ad-sponsored piracy is not news. Every few months it seems some new initiative is announced, yet in reality, in the land of the online pirates and their quest for profits, nothing much has changed.
Perhaps I’m too impatient, too demanding….Certainly today’s announcement by Group M isn’t bad news, but talk only takes us so far. I’m waiting for more progress–for days when I don’t visit YouTube and see this:

Ads for major brands on clips of LIVE-TV murder

Ads for major brands on pirated movie on YouTube
by Ellen Seidler | Copyright, Film, Law, Piracy
Court’s language on “fair use” won’t change fight against online piracy
Indie filmmakers and musicians who find their work uploaded to YouTube without permission are probably pretty familiar with sending DMCA notices to Google. I know I am. I also know that the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeal’s decision in the EFF’s infamous “Dancing Baby” lawsuit will have ZERO impact on how I approach sending those notices moving forward.
In the wake of Monday’s decision, much has been made (and written) about the potential impact it will have on content creators who must use the DMCA to remove infringing/pirated copies of their work online. Debate centers around the court’s interpretation of “fair use” and whether a rights holder must consider whether fair use applies before sending a takedown notice. Fact is, I already do that each and every time I send a notice.
When I find a full copy of our film on YouTube, I send a takedown notice. When I find our film uploaded in parts on YouTube (part 1, part 2, part 3, etc) I send a takedown notice. When I find sections of our film more than 3 or 4 minutes long uploaded on YouTube, I typically send a takedown notice. When I find someone has edited and uploaded a mashup using short clips from our film I generally just monetize the video (usually the music is owned by someone else) and leave the clip alone. As much as I believe that the DMCA is broken--and weighted against creators–it’s the only tool we have to protect our work from online theft so I use it…often.
In terms of judging whether something is “fair use” I consider how much of our film is used and the way it’s used. While I’m pretty well aware of what “fair use” means, I’m sorry to say that those who upload content to YouTube are not. In a number of instances YouTube users have uploaded copies of our film in its entirety. When I find these copies I immediately issue a takedown. No brainer right?
Many YouTube users don’t understand “fair use”
Well, apparently many YouTube users don’t have a clue as to what fair use means since some protest my takedowns saying they have the right to upload my film because doing so is “fair use.” When this happens I reinstate my claim and send them a polite note explaining that they are wrong and that it would be a good idea to review YouTube’s own explanations as to what fair use actually means:
The four factors of fair use
In the United States, fair use is determined by a judge, who analyzes how each of the four factors of fair use applies to a specific case.
1. The purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes
Courts typically focus on whether the use is “transformative.” That is, whether it adds new expression or meaning to the original, or whether it merely copies from the original. Commercial uses are less likely to be considered fair, though it’s possible to monetize a video and still take advantage of the fair use defense.
2. The nature of the copyrighted work
Using material from primarily factual works is more likely to be fair than using purely fictional works.
3. The amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole
Borrowing small bits of material from an original work is more likely to be considered fair use than borrowing large portions. However, even a small taking may weigh against fair use in some situations if it constitutes the “heart” of the work.
4. The effect of the use upon the potential market for, or value of, the copyrighted work
Uses that harm the copyright owner’s ability to profit from his or her original work are less likely to be fair uses. Courts have sometimes made an exception under this factor in cases involving parodies.
I must say, however, that as a filmmaker I’ve not really taken advantage of fair use. When I co-directed and produced the documentary Fighting for Our Lives-Facing AIDS in San Francisco we used short video and music clips from various secondary sources. Sometimes the video clips we used were only a few seconds long, but we always asked for permission (in writing) from the creator(s). Sure, we probably could have used most of this material without asking, but as a filmmakers we respected the work of other creators.
Just last week I received a request from from a national network for permission to use some of our clips from Fighting for Our Lives for a new documentary on the AIDS epidemic that’s being produced. As with past requests for footage, I will say “yes” because I do believe that there’s value in sharing the precious pieces of history we recorded during the height of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. However, if someone grabbed bits and pieces of our documentary without bothering to ask, I would not be pleased.
Over the years respect for the work of creators has been undermined by an online ecosystem where anything digital is assumed to be ripe for the picking. Those who routinely rail against creators and copyright are saying the Lenz case decision didn’t go far enough, but I would flip it around and propose that the court should have asked whether YouTube users “unambiguously contemplate” whether a clip would infringe someone’s copyright before uploading content to the site?
When I teach my film students about copyright I start by asking them if any of them have ever downloaded music or movies from the internet. Not surprisingly, most sheepishly raise their hands. However, as the semester progresses and they learn that it will be their work that’s at stake, perspectives gradually shift. My students realize their work has value and the effort that went into creating should be honored.
Perhaps if we stop justifying our lack of respect for creators by demonizing the business of creation ( i.e. the record companies and Hollywood studios) and start appreciating (and rewarding) the work done by creators–both individually and collectively–we won’t have to depend on courts to determine what’s fair.
The DMCA is a dated and dusty law and puts an undue burden on creators, but until Congress takes action, it’s the only tool creators have to protect themselves.The silly dancing baby clip in question was actually allowed to remain on YouTube after a counter-notice was submitted because the creaky system had actually worked as intended….much ado about nothing–save for the fact folks at the EFF saw an opportunity to further their anti-copyright agenda.
Has this decision made it even harder for artists to compete in the digital age? Perhaps–but for me, and probably most everyone else, it’s merely business as usual. I’ll continue to consider fair use before I send that takedown notice on YouTube (or elsewhere) and in doing so, give more thought to the process than those (who routinely flout copyright law) do at the other end.
by Ellen Seidler | Copyright, Google
Major brands’ billions allow YouTube to cash in on crap
Earlier this month I wrote a post asking why major companies allowed YouTube to place their ads adjacent to video clips of the WDBJ-TV that took place on during a morning show live shot. The on-air murders were horrific and its bad enough to find YouTube cashing in on them by placing ads for the likes of Amazon, Netflix and others along side the clips. What I didn’t know when I wrote the post was exactly how clueless advertisers are with regard to how their ad dollars are spent on YouTube.
According to a story in the Financial Times published last week, until now, advertisers have pretty much been kept in the dark as to how many viewers actually see the ads. I would venture to guess this also means advertisers continue to also be oblivious as to where ads are placed.
YouTube is preparing to allow companies to independently verify what proportion of the adverts they place on the video platform can be seen by viewers.
The move is a response to complaints by advertisers such as Unilever and Kellogg’s, which have become increasingly concerned that they are wasting money on ads that are not visible. – Financial Times:
“Wasting money” on ads that aren’t visible???? How ’bout wasting money on ads that appear next to terrorist recruiting videos or live TV murders? It’s actually quite remarkable to think that YouTube has gotten away with raking in billions in ad revenue without verifying a damn thing. Of course when it comes to raking in the bucks, when it comes to Google’s YouTube, and web advertising in general, it’s pretty much an anything goes mentality…copyright and standards be damned. YouTube has never provided transparency as to its business practices, both in terms of creators or advertisers.
As Music Tech Policy’s Chris Castle noted in a post last week:
Anyone who has reviewed a YouTube royalty statement knows that there’s some pretty strange things going on with advertising on the Google video monopoly. If it’s any comfort, we’re not the only ones. Advertisers have finally managed to crack the YouTube code according to Reuters. Of course, if it’s like most things having to do with accountability for YouTube or Google, it’s probably ice in winter–that is, a sham. But let’s see what happens. However–if advertisers can now find out where their ad is appearing, why can’t artists also know which ads are appearing on pages with their videos?
Aside from documented cases of kickbacks being paid by media companies (“Unbeknown to advertisers, he said, US agencies were taking “rebates and kickbacks” from media companies in exchange for spending their clients’ money with them“), there’s the general feeling among advertisers that they have no idea where their money is going or if it’s going anywhere at all.
In what other media realm is their such a lack of accountability? When it comes to television, advertisers are hyper-aware of what programming their ads appear on. The same goes for print. Crazy as it sounds YouTube has apparently managed–for years–to pull the wool over advertisers eyes while raking in billions in revenue. According to the Financial Times, YouTube’s ad business continues to grow:
The number of advertisers on YouTube has soared more than 40 per cent in the past year as big brands seek to reach millennial consumers on Google’s video site.
On the eve of VidCon, an online video event in Los Angeles, YouTube said advertisers from the top 100 brands, based on a ranking by consultants Interbrand, were spending 60 per cent more than last year.
For a fascinating look behind the curtain of Google/YouTube’s ad eco-system and future prospects, this report, “The Future of Online Video Advertising (v2.0); A Focused Deep Dive on YouTube” produced by Jefferies Equity Research.
As for the current state of affairs, I checked YouTube while writing this post to see whether WDBH clips still feature ads and had no difficulty finding more examples. This time you can add Chile’s to and the Las Vegas Arias Resort to the list of advertisers underwriting these murder clips on YouTube.

Ads for Chile’s Restaurant and Aria Resort appear on clip of WDBJ murder.
While advertisers are demanding more transparency on how many eyeballs actually see their ads, how about demanding transparency as to what content their advertising underwrites? Are they that desperate to attract eyeballs that it doesn’t matter what those eyeballs end up seeing next to their ads? Does Chile’s Texas Lemonade or Aria’s French toast really go well with a live-TV murder? What will it take to get advertisers to demand better?