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- 16 December 2010
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10:05 p.m. The orchestra is playing a medley of Japanese video game songs as the athletes come in. For the gamers out there, here's the set list:
Dragon Quest - "Overture: Roto's Theme"
Final Fantasy - "Victory Fanfare"
Tales of series - "Sorey's Theme - The Shepherd"
Monster Hunter - "Proof of a Hero"
Kingdom Hearts - "Olympus Coliseum"
Chrono Trigger - "Frog's Theme"
Ace Combat - "First Flight"
Tales of series - "Pomp and Majesty"
Monster Hunter - "Wind of Departure"
Chrono Trigger - "Robo's Theme"
Sonic the Hedgehog - "Star Light Zone"
Winning Eleven (Pro Evolution Soccer) - "eFootball walk-on theme"
Final Fantasy - "MAIN THEME"
Phantasy Star Universe - "Guardians"
Kingdom Hearts - "Hero's Fanfare"
Gradius (Nemesis) - "01 ACT I-1"
NieR - "Song of the Ancients"
SaGa series - "The Orchestral SaGa - Legend of Music"
Soulcalibur - "The Brave New Stage of History"
Sound is disabled. Copyright bots on the rampage again?
There are far better ways to make money off your content being on the internet than by bot-enforced prevention of your content being played anywhere by anyone for any reason, but the RIAA isn't interested. Copyright needs reform away from its current unjust rent-seeking authoritarian state.Sound is disabled. Copyright bots on the rampage again?
No idea, if it is then it's a real pity.
The bots have been misfiring a lot of late, with even original copyright holders finding their videos being clobbered, much to YouTube's ongoing embarrassment.There are far better ways to make money off your content being on the internet than by bot-enforced prevention of your content being played anywhere by anyone for any reason, but the RIAA isn't interested. Copyright needs reform away from its current unjust rent-seeking authoritarian state.Sound is disabled. Copyright bots on the rampage again?
No idea, if it is then it's a real pity.
I'm not sure that isn't exactly along RIAA ideals anyway. They literally don't believe in music that isn't copyrighted their preferred way, so they enforce takedowns anyway.The bots have been misfiring a lot of late, with even original copyright holders finding their videos being clobbered, much to YouTube's ongoing embarrassment.There are far better ways to make money off your content being on the internet than by bot-enforced prevention of your content being played anywhere by anyone for any reason, but the RIAA isn't interested. Copyright needs reform away from its current unjust rent-seeking authoritarian state.Sound is disabled. Copyright bots on the rampage again?
No idea, if it is then it's a real pity.