A hybrid project blending live sky observation with purpose-driven music, modern exorcism tools, and pure fun.
Dive into an immersive journey of sound and chaos.
Faced with cyberbullying and its severe real-world repercussions, documenting and explaining the facts is a complex challenge. Victims too often see their reality downplayed or discredited, making successful resolutions extremely rare and difficult.
It is to counter this injustice that the ArcoCam website was created, aiming to structure and document over a decade of various abuses, and to explain the themes explored in the recent music album.
Initially launched as a YouTube channel to stream a security camera, the ArcoCam project is now structured around three distinct and complementary components:
Capturing unfiltered reality and time passing with the changing seasons, while serving as a reminder of the importance of home security.
Here, art takes over. Through musical creation, it becomes possible to express oneself freely, to reclaim one's own narrative, and to convey serious messages without taking oneself too seriously.
Witness the passage of time, the seasonal contrasts, and the changing sky of Quebec, projected into the heart of a unique science-fiction universe within a parallel dimension.
According to Google's official Terms of Service, the company explicitly states that it holds no ownership rights over the multimedia files—whether music, images, or videos—that you design or create using its services.
In the legal section titled "Your content in Google services," the text clearly states: "Some of our services allow you to generate original content. Google will not claim ownership over that content." This means the user retains full exclusive rights to the generated files, subject to applicable copyright laws and potential third-party rights. Using Google's technologies, including its generative AI tools, does not transfer any ownership or copyright to the multinational company.
A crucial nuance must be made regarding the legal protection of these files. Just because Google claims no ownership does not automatically guarantee that you hold the copyright to the raw generated file. In many jurisdictions, including Canada, the United States, and the European Union, intellectual property authorities and courts stipulate that an artificial intelligence cannot be legally recognized as an "author."
For music, an image, or a video to be legally protected, the law requires the work to be original and to result from the skill, judgment, and expression of a human being. Consequently, a file generated purely automatically from a simple text command generally receives no protection and falls into the public domain. To claim exclusive copyright, it is essential that the file undergoes substantial modifications, retouching, editing, or significant human artistic direction that demonstrates your own creative contribution.
To learn more about the automated content identification system, please consult the YouTube Help Center.