Again, it's a privately run site that has been caught this time for uploading game trailers and now has to pay GEMA fees for the background music.
And what about GEMA and the music industry? They continue to do their job and in doing so, they also trample over virtual corpses. Doesn't matter, it's just the internet. It's just virtually already convicted and indebted youth before entering professional life. And anyway, where would we end up if everyone just uploaded random videos online for fun...
But it's not just that - in my opinion, it goes far beyond that. Not only are people criminalized for trivial matters on absurd grounds, but ultimately, GEMA and the music industry (and don't even get me started on the artists - they're at the very end of the sausage-making process and the 5 euros they would get for the game trailer site could really make a difference) are making double and triple profits from exploitation rights - even if they are only marginally affected, as in the case of game trailers (for whose background music, by the way, the game manufacturer has usually already paid - if it is original game music).
Where is the right to quote within reasonable limits? There is such a right for written works - why doesn't something like this exist for music?