Screenshot taken on: Sun, 03 Sep 2023. This screenshot shows that an appeal was made on the same day that we uploaded a video to YouTube on 21 April 2023. The date information is correct.

However, the 21 April appeal was made against a claim by QMG Affiliate, who then rejected it using the Content ID tool. This led to the video being taken down, but it was later restored after a counter notification was filed.

We included this video as part of our complaint to YouTube in Case No. [4-6356000034394], and they took strict action by banning the use of the Content ID tool from QMG Affiliate account for misuse.

To our surprise, on 02 Sep 2023, we received the same exact claim again, but this time the claimant was Arab Reach Media – Sa7i. When we appealed the claims, we were surprised once again that the system in revenue analytics of the video still recognized that it was the exact old claim and the YouTube system handled it as if the appeal we sent was on 21 April 2023, but the real second appeal date on Arab Reach Media – Sa7i was on 03 Sep 2023.

That means that the system knows that this is the same exact asset and reference and the claim itself once again. However, a YouTube team member failed to understand this and failed to believe that those accounts are operated by the same group to pirate on our company owned materials.

#2 YouTube video IDs: [MYj076otGTU]

#2 The conformity and repetition of claims have that been observed.

 

#3 YouTube video IDs: [MYj076otGTU]

#3 The conformity and repetition of claims have that been observed.

 

Two of the videos, which are audio-visual material of theatrical assets with the identifiers (OnNmH2uMF9M) and (vi9fJzYgRcc) , the Arab Reach Media – Sa7i account claimed ownership by also misusing the ContentID tool, which forced us to take YouTube action for the dispute, and the matter eventually reached counter-notifications, The fraudulent claimant can not and will not respond to it because the claimant cannot file a case against the real copyrights owners “we.”

Arabeem TV Network · A Public Appeal Concerning YouTube’s Handling of Disputed Copyright Claims and Content ID Abuse Against Egyptian Cinematic Heritage
Exhibit · A

Before You Read Anything Else.

Watch this two-minute video first. The technical record it shows — captured live and unedited — is the foundation on which the rest of this statement rests. Everything that follows is documentation around what you are about to see.

Exhibit A · Video Evidence. Live, unedited screen recording demonstrating the documentary irregularities at the heart of this matter. The video is offered as a primary exhibit — not as commentary, but as the underlying fact-pattern itself.
For the Reviewer · 60-Second Read

The Pattern at a Glance.

Four counter-notification cases. Two claimants. Four supporting documents — only one authentic, and that one names a third party as plaintiff. The same forged template re-used by both claimants on the same video. The remaining three documents are clones of each other.

Document 09 Authentic

Arabeem Case.pdf

Submitted by: ART TV Network

Issue: Names Sunnyland Film Cyprus as plaintiff — not the entity that filed the takedown on YouTube.

▶ Affected video R-tj6ktVDfI
Document 11 Defective

Wanes Case.pdf

Submitted by: ART TV Network

Issue: A stamped payment receipt presented as legal filing — no court seals, no signatures, no dates. Lists every video on our channel, including videos never subject to takedown.

▶ Affected video 7GDThQ3HeBE
Document 10 Cloned

combinepdf (6).pdf

Submitted by: Quoich – Takwene

Issue: Structurally identical to Document 09 (Arabeem Case). Editable PDF text layer, no court stamps. Used on the same video as Document 12.

▶ Affected video F0mcZGLUhPA
Document 12 Cloned

combinepdf.pdf

Submitted by: Quoich – Takwene

Issue: Structurally identical to Document 11 (Wanes Case). Used by the same claimant on the same video as Document 10 — meaning two different "legal actions" allegedly cover one video.

▶ Same video F0mcZGLUhPA
Doc 09 (ART)
→ cloned into →
Doc 10 (Takwene)

Two “independent” claimants. The same supporting document structure. The clone names the original as its source.

Doc 11 (ART)
→ cloned into →
Doc 12 (Takwene)

Same pattern. Two claimants submit substantively identical documents — and Quoich – Takwene then uses both Documents 10 and 12 against a single video.

What this means for a reviewer: When opening any of the more than twenty counter-notification threads on this account, the supporting documents submitted against the underlying videos can be cross-checked using the references above. Documents 09 and 10 share structure; documents 11 and 12 share structure; and Quoich – Takwene used both Document 10 and Document 12 against the same single video, which is itself an internal inconsistency on the face of those documents. Section § 03 (Document Analysis) and § 14 (Live Documents) reproduce all four documents in full for direct inspection.

A Public Appeal  ·  Press Office Statement

A Call for Independent Review of YouTube’s Handling of Disputed Copyright Claims and the Alleged Claiming of Egyptian Cinematic Heritage

Arabeem TV Network publishes a comprehensive, evidence-based account of nearly two years of disputed copyright takedown notices, contested Content ID claims, a channel termination we believe was issued in error, and our broader concerns regarding the apparent claiming of Egyptian cinematic and television heritage by third parties.

Filed: March 25, 2025 Subject: Copyright Dispute · DMCA · Content ID Parties Named: Quoich – Takwene · ART TV Network · Arab Reach Media – Sa7i · QMG Affiliate Status: Public · Reproducible With Attribution
§ 01 — Opening Statement

Why We Are Writing This.

A documented, public appeal — not an attack on YouTube, but a request for a closer look.

For nearly two years, Arabeem TV Network has been engaged in a difficult, documented dispute concerning a series of copyright takedown notices and Content ID claims directed at our YouTube channel by two entities — Quoich – Takwene and ART TV Network — and, as we will detail, by what appears to be a wider network of affiliated accounts. The matter has involved DMCA counter-notifications, court proceedings in Egypt, multiple restorations and re-removals of our content, and ultimately the termination of our channel.

Throughout this period we have made every reasonable effort to resolve the dispute through YouTube’s official channels. We have submitted hundreds of pages of evidence, opened numerous support cases, and corresponded with YouTube’s Partner Support, Copyright, and Legal teams. We have engaged Egyptian legal counsel, secured a favorable court ruling, and continued to operate in good faith under the framework of 17 U.S.C. § 512. Despite this, our channel remains terminated, our published works remain inaccessible to our audience, and — most concerning to us — material we believe to be ours, as well as classic Egyptian cinematic and television content whose ownership is in serious question, continues to be claimed and monetized on the platform by parties we believe have no lawful entitlement to it.

This statement is not an attack on YouTube. We recognize that the platform processes an extraordinary volume of copyright requests and that human and automated review at that scale is genuinely difficult. Our purpose here is the opposite of antagonism: we place the full documented record on the public table so that YouTube, regulators, the press, the creator community, and the wider public can examine it and reach their own conclusions. We respectfully request that YouTube — at the senior level — re-open and independently review our matter, with sight of the totality of the evidence rather than fragments of it.

A reader’s guide to this statement

Part One — Sections 02 to 08 sets out the core matter: the documented dispute concerning our channel, the takedown notices and counter-notifications between Arabeem TV Network on one side and ART TV Network and Quoich – Takwene on the other, the favorable court ruling, YouTube’s April 2024 restoration, and the October 2024 reversal and termination. This is the part most directly concerning our specific case.

Part Two — Sections 11 onwards covers a broader pattern we observed during this dispute, involving additional entities (Arab Reach Media – Sa7i and QMG Affiliate) and a much larger body of orphaned Egyptian cinematic and television heritage. Part Two is not, strictly speaking, necessary to understand or evaluate Part One. We include it because we believe the broader pattern is of independent public-interest value, and because the two are factually connected — but a reader interested only in the core case may proceed directly through Part One.

YouTube email notice to Arabeem TV Network titled 'Your YouTube Account will be disabled in 7 days' from November 2023, showing copyright removal request and listed videos.
Figure 1. One of the earliest takedown notifications received by Arabeem TV Network on November 10, 2023, indicating the impending disabling of our channel based on copyright removal requests submitted by Quoich – Takwene.
§ 02 — Timeline

A Documented Timeline of Events.

Every step is supported by emails, takedown notices, counter-notifications, support tickets, and — where applicable — court filings. We are willing to share the full record with any qualified investigator.

October 2023 Wave 1

The first wave of takedown notices

Quoich – Takwene and ART TV Network submitted a substantial series of copyright takedown notices under 17 U.S.C. § 512(c) against videos on our channel. We responded by filing counter-notifications under § 512(g), formally asserting our ownership. In total, across all waves, more than twenty separate counter-notifications were filed — each individually drafted, each meeting the statutory requirements of § 512(g)(3), each supported by the same underlying ownership and the same court ruling once it became available.

October 11, 2023 YouTube’s written commitments

The procedural path, set out by YouTube in writing

On confirming receipt of our counter-notifications, YouTube’s Copyright team made two distinct written commitments to us on the record, each of which we cite verbatim below because their wording is now central to understanding what followed:

“After 10 US business days, if we don’t get a response from the claimant, your content will be reinstated to YouTube. Also, the associated penalties on your channel will be cleared.”

“If the outcome of the legal action is in your favor, you can submit proof of the outcome by replying to this email. After receiving the proof, the content may be reinstated to YouTube.”

— YouTube Copyright Team, on the record, October 11, 2023

These commitments defined the procedural path forward. We followed them. We submitted the court ruling. The content was restored in April 2024. We record them here, in their exact wording, so the record of what was promised, and what was performed, is unambiguous.

Oct – Nov 2023 Documents

Four legal documents — significant inconsistencies

The claimants submitted four documents presented as proof of legal proceedings. Our counsel identified inconsistencies in three of the four — no court stamps or signatures, editable PDF layers. The fourth named Sunnyland Film Cyprus as plaintiff — not either of the two entities issuing the YouTube takedowns. To our knowledge, this discrepancy remains unexplained.

Nov – Dec 2023 Case 7-5742000035210

Submission of evidence to YouTube

We submitted a detailed forensic analysis to YouTube, including side-by-side comparisons of seals appearing in identical positions across supposedly independent filings, Arabic translations, and a full notice-and-counter-notice timeline.

2023 Operational

Rotating legal counsel on counter-notifications

On counsel’s advice, we listed different attorneys from our firm on each counter-notification. The same documents — bearing the same seal in the same position — continued to be re-submitted regardless. We believe this strongly suggests the supporting documents were not generated in response to specific counter-notifications.

January 2024 Egyptian Court Ruling

Favorable ruling from an Egyptian court

An Egyptian court issued a ruling in our favor in proceedings involving Sunnyland Film Cyprus, confirming our position as to ownership of the disputed works under Egyptian copyright law (consistent with the framework of 17 U.S.C. § 106 and Berne Convention principles). We promptly provided this ruling to YouTube.

April 2024 Case 6-2234000035581

YouTube restores the videos

YouTube’s internal copyright team completed processing of our counter-notifications and restored the affected videos. We are sincerely grateful for that decision and we record it here in YouTube’s favor.

June 2024 Wave 2

A second wave — invalidated

A new round of takedown notices arrived. Rather than file counter-notifications immediately we lodged formal complaints providing the full back-history. YouTube reviewed the notices, found them to be invalid, and restored the affected videos.

August 2024 Wave 3

A third wave — invalidated after counter-notice

Quoich – Takwene returned with a further round of notices accompanied by documents substantively identical to those we had previously challenged. We filed counter-notifications. YouTube reviewed the supporting material, found it insufficient, and restored the videos after the statutory § 512(g)(3) window.

October 8, 2024 Termination

Channel termination

Our channel was terminated. The notice stated YouTube was “concerned that some of the information within your legal request may be fraudulent.” We were never given a particularized explanation of which of our submissions were deemed problematic.

October 10, 2024 Reversal

Reversal of the April restoration

Twenty-one notifications were received reversing the April 2024 restoration and re-removing the affected videos. We respectfully consider this reversal to be in tension with § 512(g)(2).

Oct 17 – Dec 8, 2024 Aftermath

Re-uploads of our work begin

Videos closely matching our work — including, in some instances, our custom thumbnails with our logo removed — began appearing on channels we believe to be operated by or affiliated with ART TV Network. Complaints to YouTube received automated acknowledgments but no substantive case-by-case response.

Gmail inbox view showing eleven consecutive YouTube copyright takedown notification emails sent to Arabeem TV Network during October and November 2023.
Figure 2. Gmail view of the October–November 2023 takedown wave: eleven separate YouTube notification emails received within five weeks.
Screenshot of YouTube copyright strike notice showing 18 strikes accumulated against Arabeem TV Network with the message that the channel is scheduled to be terminated in 7 days.
Figure 3. Strike counter at the height of the October 2023 takedown wave — eighteen strikes and a seven-day countdown to termination.
§ 03 — Document Analysis

The Four Documents at the Heart of This Dispute.

We summarize our analysis below; the full forensic study is available in the evidence section.

Side-by-side comparison of two purported Egyptian Economic Court receipt pages submitted in support of YouTube takedown requests, showing identical seal placement and identical layout across documents that purport to be independent.
Figure 4. Side-by-side comparison of two of the four documents. Independent legal filings would not be expected to share identical seal placement and layout.
01

Arabeem Case

Submitted by ART TV Network

Appears to be a genuine filing, but lists Sunnyland Film Cyprus as plaintiff rather than either entity issuing the YouTube takedowns. The central unanswered question of this matter.

02

Wanes Case

Submitted by ART TV Network

Includes pages we believe to be a stamped payment receipt rather than a substantive legal filing. Enumerates every video on our channel, including content unaffected by any takedown.

03

combinedpdf (6)

Submitted by Quoich – Takwene

On inspection the underlying text appears editable; structurally appears derived from the Arabeem Case file.

04

combinedpdf

Submitted by Quoich – Takwene

Similar concerns; structurally appears derived from the Wanes Case file. Forms a matched pair with document 03.

Two ALC law firm letterhead documents shown side by side, identical layout, identical seal placement, identical signature placement, listing different defendants.
Figure 5. Two documents on identical letterhead, with identical structure and seal placement, presented as independent legal actions.
Further side-by-side comparison of the two purported legal documents showing identical layout including signature, seal and page structure.
Figure 6. The structural similarity of the two filings, again side by side.

We drew these inconsistencies to YouTube’s attention as early as November 2023. The reply we received from Partner Support is reproduced below, and we record here that the team did engage with our concerns and did escalate them internally.

Email from Arabeem TV Network to YouTube Partner Support raising concerns about document inconsistencies and editable PDF source structure across the four submitted documents.
Figure 7. Excerpt of our November 22, 2023 correspondence with YouTube Partner Support detailing our concerns.
Response from YouTube Partner Support indicating their internal team has reviewed the submitted documents and considers them valid, suggesting Arabeem provide a final judgment in their favor.
Figure 8. YouTube Partner Support’s response: the internal team considered the documents valid based on the material available and suggested we provide a final judgment.

Two months later, the Egyptian court ruling that YouTube’s support team had requested became available. We submitted it; the team subsequently restored our videos in April 2024.

YouTube Partner Support email from April 11, 2024 confirming successful processing of counter-notifications and listing the YouTube video URLs that have been reinstated.
Figure 9. April 11, 2024: YouTube Partner Support confirms the successful processing of our counter-notifications.
Continuation of the April 2024 restoration email from YouTube Partner Support listing additional reinstated videos.
Figure 10. Continuation of the same confirmation, listing further reinstated videos.
§ 04 — June & August 2024

Further Waves — and Further Restorations.

Between June and August 2024, two further rounds of notices were issued by at least four separate but related parties. On review, YouTube concluded they were invalid and restored our content.

Inbox view showing four YouTube takedown notification emails received in mid-June 2024 affecting multiple Arabeem TV Network videos.
Figure 11. The June 2024 wave as it appeared in our inbox.
Detail of YouTube takedown notification email from June 14, 2024 listing three Arabeem TV Network videos and naming Mohamed Bin Mufaq Bin Saadoun as the removal requester.
Figure 12. Notice detail from the June 14, 2024 round.
YouTube Copyright team email from June 27, 2024 informing Arabeem that a takedown request has been determined invalid and the affected video has been reinstated.
Figure 13. YouTube’s response: a June 2024 notice determined invalid and the affected video reinstated.
YouTube Copyright team email confirming a separate June 2024 takedown request was also determined invalid and the videos reinstated.
Figure 14. A further June 2024 takedown also determined invalid and reinstated.
Inbox view showing seven YouTube takedown notification emails received during August 2024 affecting Arabeem TV Network videos.
Figure 15. The August 2024 wave as it appeared in our inbox.
Detail of an August 2024 YouTube takedown notification showing the four separate claimants who issued takedowns within days of each other against various Arabeem videos.
Figure 16. Four different named claimants in the August 2024 wave — Quoich – Takwene, ART TV Network, Al Arabia for Cine Production & Distribution, and Mohamed Fawzy Film.
YouTube Copyright team email from September 9, 2024 informing Arabeem that processing of their counter-notification has completed and the videos have been restored.
Figure 17. September 9, 2024: YouTube confirms the August counter-notifications were processed and the videos restored.
Inbox view showing six YouTube Copyright team responses to Arabeem counter-notifications during September 2024, each confirming successful processing.
Figure 18. Six successful counter-notification responses received from YouTube’s Copyright team in September 2024.
§ 05 — October 2024

The Termination of the Channel.

Only weeks after the August counter-notifications had been processed in our favor, our channel was terminated for alleged abuse of YouTube’s legal request systems.

We respectfully consider this decision to be inconsistent with the prior reviews that favored us and, more importantly, with the underlying record. We have asked YouTube several times for a particularized explanation: which of our submissions, on what specific basis, was considered abusive. To date we have not received a substantive answer to that question.

YouTube termination email dated October 8, 2024 stating that Arabeem TV Network's channel has been removed because YouTube was concerned some of the information in their legal request may be fraudulent.
Figure 19. The October 8, 2024 termination notice.
YouTube Copyright team email from October 8, 2024 informing Arabeem the account has been terminated and explaining the appeal process and what evidence to supply.
Figure 20. The corresponding October 8, 2024 communication from YouTube’s Copyright team and our appeal options.
Inbox view showing 25 emails received on October 10, 2024 from YouTube Copyright reversing previous counter-notification decisions and re-removing the affected videos.
Figure 21. October 10, 2024: twenty-five emails reversing prior counter-notification decisions.

The status emails that continued to arrive in the weeks that followed were, to our reading, automated and largely identical from week to week. We understand the platform-level constraints behind that, but the lack of particularized response made it very difficult to take meaningful corrective action even where we wished to.

Inbox view showing five identical YouTube Copyright takedown notification emails received weekly between October and December 2024, each titled 'Your YouTube Account has been disabled' with no case-specific detail.
Figure 22. The recurring weekly notification we received without case-specific detail.
§ 06 — An Asymmetry in the Record

What YouTube’s Own Actions Show.

Beyond what was said in writing, what was done on October 10, 2024 carries its own evidentiary weight. We share it here because we believe it is, on the face of the record, difficult to reconcile with the explanation we were given.

On October 10, 2024 — the day the April 2024 restoration was reversed — Arabeem TV Network had at that point filed more than twenty separate counter-notifications under § 512(g). The counter-notifications were materially identical in every meaningful respect: same legal framework, same uploader, same supporting court ruling, same procedural posture. They differed only in which claimant had filed the underlying takedown that each counter-notification was responding to.

What we observed on October 10, 2024, however, was not a uniform action. It was an action that distinguished between counter-notifications by claimant:

The asymmetry, as visible in the record

  • Counter-notifications responding to ART TV Network takedowns — the underlying videos were re-removed on October 10, 2024.
  • Counter-notifications responding to Quoich – Takwene takedowns — the underlying videos remained restored, and many remain restored to this day on the channel’s archive.

We respectfully submit that this distinction is significant. If the basis for the October 10, 2024 reversal were that our counter-notifications themselves were defective — that, as the communication issued to us suggested, “some info within this legal request may be fraudulent” — then the defect, if it existed, would logically apply uniformly to all of our counter-notifications. They were drafted using the same template, by the same uploader, against the same underlying right, with the same supporting court ruling, on the same days.

The fact that they were treated differently suggests, by ordinary reasoning, that the basis for the asymmetric treatment lay not in our counter-notifications, but in YouTube’s own assessment of the documents submitted by each of the two claimants. The most parsimonious explanation for the action taken on October 10, 2024 is that YouTube’s team had, at some level, formed a different view about the validity of the supporting documents submitted by Quoich – Takwene compared to those submitted by ART TV Network — and treated the corresponding counter-notifications accordingly.

If that is correct, it raises a question we believe is owed a direct answer: on what basis were the Arabeem-side counter-notifications then characterized as “abusive legal requests,” when YouTube’s own actions appear to acknowledge that at least half of the underlying claimant documents were not relied upon?

On the “abusive legal requests” characterization

We respectfully observe, with the care this point deserves, that the phrase “abusive legal requests” — as applied to our submissions — does not appear to fit the procedural posture of the record:

  • Arabeem TV Network has never, at any point, submitted a takedown request, a DMCA notice of infringement, or any other request to remove third-party content from YouTube.
  • Our submissions on the relevant threads have, exclusively and explicitly, been counter-notifications under § 512(g), filed in our capacity as the recipient of takedowns rather than their sender.
  • A counter-notification is a defensive instrument. It is, by definition, the response of a creator who believes their content was removed in error or in bad faith. It cannot, in the ordinary meaning of the term, constitute an “abusive legal request” for removal — because it is not a request for removal at all.
  • Each of our counter-notifications was supported by a favorable court ruling and, on the merits, was processed in our favor by YouTube’s own copyright team in April 2024.

We respectfully ask that this characterization be reviewed at a senior level, and that whatever procedural classification was applied to our submissions internally be corrected on the record.

A further procedural observation — the in-system framing

Beyond what was communicated to us by email, we want to record one further observation about how this matter is framed inside YouTube’s own systems. We do so because the technical evidence is, in our respectful view, consistent with the asymmetry described above and important for any reviewer to be aware of.

When the user account associated with this matter attempts to sign in to YouTube, the system routes the user to a form titled “Copyright Removal Request Appeal.” The form begins with the following sentence:

“If you believe your copyright removal request was rejected in error by YouTube, you may submit an appeal using this form.”

— YouTube post-termination appeal form, as presented to our account

Screenshot of the YouTube post-termination appeal form titled 'Copyright Removal Request Appeal' presented to Arabeem TV Network's account after the October 2024 termination, framing the appeal as concerning a 'copyright removal request' rather than a counter-notification
Figure 53. The post-termination appeal form, as presented to our account upon attempting to sign in. The form classifies the matter as concerning a “Copyright Removal Request” — that is, as if we had submitted a takedown notice and had it rejected, rather than as if we had submitted counter-notifications defending our own works.

We respectfully note the procedural significance of this. We have, at no point in the entire history of our account on YouTube, submitted a takedown request or a copyright removal request. The submissions that led to the present situation were, exclusively, counter-notifications under § 512(g) defending our own content from third-party takedowns. The form, however, would have us appeal a “copyright removal request” we never filed.

We did not, and have not, completed this form. The reason we did not, and the reason we want to put it on the record now, is straightforward: to complete a form that asks us to appeal the rejection of a “copyright removal request” would be to accept, by our own act, a procedural classification of our submissions that the documented record does not support. We respectfully consider that to be a step we are not in a position to take, given the underlying facts.

We mention this not to attribute intent to any individual at YouTube, but because the form itself is an artifact of the platform’s internal classification of this matter. The fact that an account holder whose only submissions were defensive counter-notifications is routed, on sign-in, to a form designed for appellants of rejected takedowns, is — at minimum — a system-level reflection of the same procedural inversion we have raised throughout this statement.

We have preserved a screenshot of the form for the record (Figure 53 above), and we remain available to provide any further technical detail to any qualified reviewer.

§ 06-B — The Indirect Route

Three Identities, One Claim — and a Simple Question.

If a party truly holds the rights to a work, the direct route is available to it: its own name, its own domain, its own registered address, a case filed in its own jurisdiction. The route taken here was the opposite of direct. We set out why that matters.

Across this dispute, a single underlying claim against our works was presented to YouTube through what appears to be three different identities, in three different places, none of which fully lines up with the others. We do not assert a conclusion. We lay the three out side by side and ask the question any reviewer would ask.

The three identities, as they appear in the record

  • The takedown notices were issued in the names of ART TV Network and Quoich – Takwene. ART TV Network is, per public records, a Jordan-associated entity with well-known, long-established domains of its own.
  • The notice emails, however, did not arrive from any domain publicly associated with ART. A number of them arrived from addresses ending in mysatgo.com — a domain whose registration details are withheld behind a privacy/proxy service, with no public connection to either named claimant.
  • The supporting legal documents name a third, entirely different party as plaintiff: Sunnyland Film Cyprus — an entity presented as based in Cyprus.

So the takedowns are filed by two entities; the emails come from a privacy-shielded domain tied to neither; and the documents are in the name of a third entity in a third country. We respectfully ask the questions that this arrangement naturally raises:

The questions a genuine rights-holder’s conduct would not raise

  • If ART TV Network is the lawful rights-holder, why were the notices not sent from a domain publicly and verifiably associated with ART, rather than from a privacy-shielded domain (mysatgo.com) bearing no public relationship to it?
  • Why do the supporting legal documents not state the claimant company’s full registered name, its registered address, and its corporate particulars in full — as a substantive filing by a real corporate plaintiff ordinarily would?
  • If the plaintiff named in the documents is Sunnyland Film Cyprus, an entity said to be in Cyprus, why is the matter framed around an Egyptian court — and where, in the documents, are the power-of-attorney (tawḳīl) registration numbers that Egyptian procedure ordinarily requires on the first page, establishing that the Egyptian law office is acting on a duly registered authorization from the foreign company?
  • Why was the same set of documents distributed for use by both ART TV Network and Quoich – Takwene, rather than each genuine rights-holder filing in its own name with its own proofs?
  • Above all: if the entitlement were genuine, why was not a single substantive copyright action filed in any jurisdiction other than Egypt — and why, when the document purports to concern an Egyptian court, does it name a Cypriot company as plaintiff without the registered authorization chain that would link the two?

We make no allegation as to any individual’s intent. We observe only this, and we observe it plainly: a party in lawful possession of its rights has every incentive to take the shortest, most transparent, most verifiable route — its own name, its own domain, its own address, its own jurisdiction, its own registered authorization. The route reflected in this record is, instead, a long and indirect one, passing through several different names, a privacy-shielded domain, and a cross-border arrangement whose authorizing paperwork is not visible on the face of the documents. We respectfully submit that the indirectness of the route is, itself, a fact a reviewer is entitled to weigh.

§ 06-C — Two Documents, One Receipt

Two “Separate” Cases That Share a Single Receipt.

When the two principal documents are placed side by side, a reviewer can see something with the naked eye: the seal and signature sit in the same position to the millimetre, while a handful of numbers and dates above them differ. We describe exactly what is visible and let it speak.

Two of the documents central to this matter — the file we refer to as the Arabeem Case and the file we refer to as the Wanes Case (and their counterparts combinepdf and combinepdf (6)) — are each presented as a distinct legal action, matched to a distinct counter-notification thread. On inspection, however, they appear to be the same underlying receipt and the same underlying letter, with a small number of fields altered.

What is identical

When the two are aligned, the following are not merely similar but, to the eye, identical in placement:

Identical across both “separate” documents

  • The court seal and the collector’s signature occupy the same position on the page to the millimetre, at the same angle, with the same surrounding text.
  • The institutional code (10100635), the case number (181), the year (17 ق), the competent circuit, and the “new case” service description are the same.
  • The letterhead, the law-office identification, the body paragraphs, and the overall page structure are the same.

What differs

Against that identical backdrop, a small and specific set of fields differs between the two documents:

The fields that change

  • The receipt number and certain digits in the payment table differ, while the surrounding digits sit in the same boxes.
  • The payment date differs — one document reads 2023/1/3, the other 2023/10/9.
  • The handwritten date above the signature differs — 2022/12/12 on one, 2022/11/12 on the other.
  • The handwritten case figure differs — 1901 on one, 1601 on the other.
  • The defendant’s name and address differ — WAEL NADER MARZOUK at 48 Hindawi Sultan Street on one; AHMED ALI EMRAN at 16 Makram Ebeid Street on the other.

We respectfully draw the obvious inference to the reviewer’s attention without overstating it. Two genuinely independent legal filings — different cases, different defendants, filed on different dates — would not ordinarily be expected to carry a court seal and a handwritten signature positioned identically, to the millimetre, on the page, while a handful of dates and numbers sitting just above them read differently. The natural reading of two documents that are identical in everything except a few alterable fields is that they originate from a single source document, with those fields changed, so that each could be presented as a fresh case answering a different counter-notification thread.

Side-by-side comparison of the two documents: the payment receipt page, showing identical layout while the receipt number and certain digits differ.
Side-by-side comparison: the court seal impression appears in the identical position on the page in both documents.
Side-by-side comparison: the handwritten case figure and date above the signature, reading differently between the two otherwise-identical documents.
Side-by-side comparison: the law-office letterhead and body, with the defendant name and address as the changed fields.
Side-by-side comparison: the signature block, positioned identically in both documents while the handwritten dates above it differ.
Side-by-side comparison: the closing page and seal, identical in placement across both documents.
Side-by-side comparison: the schedule of works listed in each document.
Side-by-side comparison: the final page with the court seal in the same position in both.
Side-by-side comparison: detail of the payment table, with specific digits differing between the two documents.
Side-by-side comparison: the receipt header detail, identical in layout across the two documents.
Side-by-side comparison: the defendant-details section, the changed field, against an otherwise identical document.

Figure 30 — The two documents aligned side by side across multiple pages. In each pair the court seal and the handwritten signature occupy the same position on the page, while specific receipt numbers, payment dates, the handwritten date above the signature, the handwritten case figure, and the defendant name and address differ — the pattern one would expect from a single source document with selected fields altered, rather than from two independent filings. (An overview comparison also appears as Figure 4 in § 03; the full-resolution originals are in § 14 for direct inspection.)

On the technical examination

We carried out a preliminary error-level analysis of the document images using a publicly available tool (FotoForensics). That analysis highlighted regions around the altered name and number fields that, in our non-expert reading, appear to warrant examination by a qualified forensic document examiner — including areas of localised difference of the kind that can be associated with the editing of a specific region of an image. We state this carefully and within its limits: error-level analysis is an indicative screening tool, not proof, and we do not present our own reading of it as a forensic conclusion. We raise it only to identify, for any properly qualified examiner, precisely where on these documents we believe a closer technical look is merited.

What we can say without any need for technical expertise is what is visible to the naked eye: the seal and signature do not move, while the numbers and dates above them do. We respectfully submit that this, standing alone, is sufficient reason for YouTube — and any other reviewer — to treat these two documents not as two independent legal actions, but as what they appear on their face to be.

The full-resolution originals of both documents are reproduced for direct inspection in Section § 14 (Live Documents), so that any reviewer can perform the same side-by-side comparison for themselves.

A detail inside the document that points to coordination between the two claimants

There is one further detail on the face of the Arabeem Case document that we believe a reviewer should see, because it speaks directly to the relationship between the two claimants who, in their takedown notices, presented themselves as wholly separate entities.

The document contains a table of video titles and links, headed “Video title / Video Link.” In that table, the first two entries appear as live, clickable blue hyperlinks, while the remaining links are rendered as ordinary black text. The two blue links are:

The two live hyperlinks in ART’s document — and who actually issued their takedowns

  • zY1Vwp7viug — “هند والدكتور نعمان الحلقة 7”. The removal request for this video was issued, per YouTube’s own notice, by Quoich – Takwene (contact: copyrights@takwene.com).
  • hGTKbae-wcw — “Elbakhel w Ana S01 E07”. The removal request for this video was, again per YouTube’s own notice, issued by Quoich – Takwene (contact: copyrights@takwene.com).
Excerpt from the Arabeem Case document submitted by ART TV Network, showing a table of video titles and links in which the first two entries (zY1Vwp7viug and hGTKbae-wcw) appear as live blue clickable hyperlinks while the remaining links are plain black text.
Figure 42. The video table inside the Arabeem Case document — the file submitted by ART TV Network. The first two rows (zY1Vwp7viug and hGTKbae-wcw) appear as live blue hyperlinks, distinct from the plain black text of the other links. The blue colouring is present in the document as received; it is not added by us.

This is the point. The document is the Arabeem Case — the file submitted in the name of, and relied upon by, ART TV Network to answer our counter-notifications. Yet the two live links embedded inside it correspond to videos whose takedowns were issued not by ART, but by Quoich – Takwene — a supposedly separate and independent claimant, each of which, in its own notices, asserted that it was acting as the owner removing infringements “in its own name.”

We respectfully submit that there is no ordinary explanation for how links to videos taken down by Quoich – Takwene came to be embedded in a document submitted by ART TV Network, other than that the underlying material was shared between the two — that is, that the two entities, presented to YouTube as independent, were in fact coordinating, with one supplying the other with the very links used to assemble the document. Two genuinely separate rights-holders, each removing content it independently owned, would have no reason and no means to populate one another’s legal filings in this way.

YouTube takedown notice for the video zY1Vwp7viug, titled Hind wa Al-Doctor Nu'man Episode 7, showing the removal request was issued by Quoich - Takwene with contact copyrights@takwene.com.
Figure 43. YouTube’s takedown notice for zY1Vwp7viug — one of the two videos appearing as a live link inside ART’s document. The notice records the removal request as issued by Quoich – Takwene (copyrights@takwene.com), not by ART.
YouTube takedown notice for the video hGTKbae-wcw, titled Elbakhel w Ana S01 E07, showing the removal request was issued by Quoich - Takwene with contact copyrights@takwene.com.
Figure 44. YouTube’s takedown notice for hGTKbae-wcw — the second live link inside ART’s document. Again, the removal request was issued by Quoich – Takwene (copyrights@takwene.com). The same two videos that ART’s document carries as live links were taken down by the supposedly separate Quoich – Takwene.

We add one observation about the blue links themselves, and we are careful to attribute it correctly: that blue colouring is not ours. It is present in the document as we received it. A link renders as live blue text, rather than as plain black text, when it is entered into an editable document as an active hyperlink. The presence of live hyperlinks inside the document is therefore consistent with the finding already discussed in this section — that the file carried an editable text layer — and it suggests the document was assembled, in an open and editable state, by gathering links from more than one source. We raise this not as a forensic conclusion but as a visible characteristic of the document that any reviewer can confirm by opening the original in § 14 and observing which links are live and which are not.

Taken together with the shared receipt and identical seal placement described above, this detail moves the matter, in our respectful view, from “two documents that resemble each other” to “two claimants whose own filing contains the other’s material.” We place it on the record and leave the inference to the reviewer.

§ 06-D — A Test of Conduct

Who Defends Their Rights, and Who Conceals.

The clearest evidence of who holds the underlying rights is not in any document — it is in how each side behaved when YouTube’s own systems put the question to a direct test. We set that test out below, using YouTube’s own records.

While we were awaiting YouTube’s decision on the Egyptian court ruling under case 6-2234000035581 — the case that would ultimately lead to the April 2024 restoration — a parallel development was unfolding that we believe is highly revealing. We documented it for YouTube in writing at the time, and we set it out here because, on the face of YouTube’s own records, it answers a question the entire dispute turns on: which party was behaving as a genuine rights-holder, and which was not.

What was happening while we waited

After we obtained the favorable court ruling and submitted it to YouTube, channels we believe to be affiliated with the same network — operating under names such as “MyContent” and “ART أفلام” — began re-uploading our works and concealing them using YouTube’s territory-blocking facility — the “block in specific territories” control (a form of geo-fencing) that, per YouTube’s own documentation, is available only to partners with access to Content Manager and the Content ID system. Specifically, the works were set to be blocked in specific territories, including Egypt.

The practical effect of a territory-targeted block is precise and, we believe, deliberate: the re-uploaded copies were made invisible to viewers inside Egypt — our primary market and the audience most able to recognise our work and object to its misuse — while remaining visible elsewhere. This is not a hypothetical inference. It is exactly how the conduct surfaced:

How the geo-targeted concealment came to light

We should be precise about one point, because it matters: we do not hold, and have never held, Content ID. Content ID is the tool the claimant network was using against us. What we have access to, as any ordinary channel does, is the copyright page within our own YouTube Studio. One of the concealed re-uploads — the work at YouTube Video ID LX21uq29fzk — did not surface for us in the ordinary way at all. From inside Egypt, we could not see it. It came to light only because a member of our team located outside Egypt was able to view the re-upload, after which we located the corresponding entry on the copyright page within our Studio.

Our original source video for that work sits on our own channel at zkFZASTpWb8. Had we not had staff outside Egypt, the concealment would, in all likelihood, have gone entirely undetected — an infringement hidden, by design, from precisely the people most able to identify it.

We reported this to YouTube’s Partner Support on February 18, 2024, while case 6-2234000035581 was still open. In that correspondence we set out our position plainly: that the claimant names then in use — including ART TV Network and Arab Reach Media – Sa7i — appeared to be linked to a single entity; that — as we understood the position at the time — Arab Reach Media – Sa7i was the account managing the Content ID tool for these channels; and that we had by that point been compelled to restore more than thirty of our videos following counter-notifications. We should be candid on one point of detail: which specific entity within this network actually held and operated the Content ID tool is something we were not, and are not, in a position to state with certainty. What we identified at the time, in that correspondence, was Arab Reach Media – Sa7i; we record that here as the identification we made then, rather than as a fact we can independently confirm. We record here, for completeness, the contact address used by the claimant in the removal notices as it appeared in YouTube’s own records: kattiah@armadco.com — the same armadco domain referenced elsewhere in this statement.

Email from Arabeem TV Network to YouTube Partner Support dated February 18, 2024 under case 6-2234000035581, reporting that affiliated channels were re-uploading and concealing Arabeem's works via the Content ID tool with territory-targeted blocking, and identifying the LX21uq29fzk video that did not surface in the ordinary way and was found via the copyright page in Arabeem's own Studio after staff outside Egypt could see the re-upload.
Figure 40. Our February 18, 2024 report to YouTube Partner Support under case 6-2234000035581, documenting the Content ID concealment as it was occurring — including the LX21uq29fzk work that did not surface for us in the ordinary way and was found only because staff located outside Egypt could see the re-upload, after which it was located on the copyright page in our Studio.

The test YouTube’s own system applied

Here is the point on which we ask any reviewer to focus. YouTube’s systems offer a rights-holder two very different instruments, and the choice between them is itself evidence:

Two instruments — and what the choice reveals

  • A territory-targeted block (geo-fencing) — YouTube’s “block in specific territories” control, which silently removes a video from view in chosen countries, with no notice to anyone, no stated protected work, and no requirement to stand behind the claim before a human. It conceals. It does not confront. Per YouTube’s own documentation, this control is available only to partners with Content Manager and Content ID access — here, the network behind these claims (which, in our February 2024 correspondence, we identified at the time as operating through Arab Reach Media – Sa7i, though we cannot state with certainty which specific entity within the network held the tool). We, by contrast, have never held Content ID at all.
  • A formal copyright removal request — a transparent instrument that names the requester, identifies the protected work, gives the uploader a clear seven-day window to respond, and exposes the requester to liability for misrepresentation under § 512(f) if the claim is false.

On YouTube’s own advice — given to us by Partner Support during this very case — we said we would, upon restoration of our originals, use the transparent route: a formal copyright removal request against the concealed copies, so that the dispute would be visible and trackable on the public copyright record rather than buried in an automated tool. We deliberately did not reach for any concealment mechanism of our own. We chose the instrument that puts a name to the claim and a clock on the response, precisely because we were prepared to stand behind it.

The outcome of that choice is documented in YouTube’s own resolution email, reproduced below. When we filed the formal removal request and the uploader was given the standard seven days to act, the result was immediate and, we submit, telling:

YouTube Copyright resolution email dated June 7, 2024 titled 'Request resolved', confirming Arabeem's delayed copyright removal request was reviewed, that the uploader was given seven days to take action, and listing the videos in question including 78TXkK8Cwjo, LX21uq29fzk and Ukof2EHiF4E.
Figure 41. YouTube’s June 7, 2024 “Request resolved” confirmation. Our formal removal request was reviewed; the uploader was given the standard seven days to respond, with the options to do nothing (and let the video be removed), seek a retraction, or delete the content. The videos in question — including 78TXkK8Cwjo, LX21uq29fzk and Ukof2EHiF4E — match the concealed copies we had reported in February.

Faced with a transparent, named, seven-day removal request, the uploading party deleted the material within the window rather than contest it. We ask the reviewer to weigh what that response means. A party that genuinely held the rights to these works would have had every reason to stand its ground — to do nothing and let our request be tested, or to seek a retraction on the merits. Instead, the material was removed the moment it was placed under a transparent process that would have required the uploader to defend the claim.

One side used a silent, territory-targeted tool to hide the works from the very audience most able to recognise them. The other side used a named, time-limited, accountable process to surface the dispute in the open. When those two approaches finally met, the concealed copies were quietly deleted rather than defended.

Why this matters to the central question

We do not claim technical expertise in the internal mechanics of the Content ID system, and we do not need to. The conduct speaks for itself within YouTube’s own framework:

What the record shows about each party’s conduct

  • Arabeem TV Network obtained a court ruling, submitted it through YouTube’s official channel, and — when confronted with concealed copies of its own works — chose the transparent instrument: a named copyright removal request with a seven-day window and full exposure to § 512(f) liability.
  • The affiliated network chose the concealing instrument: a Content ID block targeted at Egypt specifically, designed to keep the works invisible to the audience most likely to challenge them, with no named claim and no accountability.
  • When the two met head-on, the concealed material was deleted rather than defended.

We respectfully submit that this is among the most direct evidence available of who, in this dispute, was acting as a genuine rights-holder defending lawful works, and who was using the platform’s most powerful and least visible tools to misappropriate heritage while avoiding scrutiny. If YouTube’s concern in this matter is to identify which party has misused its systems, the answer is, we believe, written into the systems’ own logs: one party stood behind its claims in the open; the other made its claims disappear the moment it was asked to stand behind them.

We have preserved the full February 18, 2024 correspondence and the June 7, 2024 resolution email (Figures 40 and 41), together with the supporting Studio screenshots referenced in that correspondence, and we remain ready to provide the complete thread under case 6-2234000035581 to any qualified reviewer.

§ 07 — Content ID

Concerns Regarding Content ID Use — Our Channel.

Within the specific scope of our channel, the use of YouTube’s Content ID system by Quoich – Takwene raised concerns of its own. (A separate, much larger pattern of Content ID use against orphaned Egyptian cinematic heritage is set out in Part Two of this statement, under “The Wider Concern.”)

Repeated claims on the same content

Quoich – Takwene placed Content ID claims on several of our videos — by example, the work at youtube.com/watch?v=Vk3kPQj7DNU, a television-series episode whose rights we hold. We disputed; the claim was released. Within days the same claimant filed a new claim on the same video, framed as an audio-visual claim. We disputed again; released again. The cycle then repeated with an audio-only claim. We respectfully suggest that the repeated re-submission of materially similar claims on the same video after each successful dispute is at odds with the spirit of YouTube’s own Content ID Abuse Policy.

YouTube email notification dated October 12, 2023 informing Arabeem that a copyright owner using Content ID has claimed material in their video titled Hind Wa Al-Doctor Nu'man Episode 14, claimed by Quoich Takwene.
Figure 23. The first Content ID claim on this episode (October 12, 2023).
YouTube email notification dated November 24, 2023 confirming the copyright claim on the same episode has been released because the dispute was not reviewed within thirty days.
Figure 24. The claim is released (November 24, 2023).
YouTube email notification dated December 19, 2023 informing Arabeem that copyrighted content has been detected in the same video, now claimed by Quoich Takwene as an audio video claim affecting monetization.
Figure 25. A new claim — as audio-visual — filed against the same video weeks later.
YouTube email notification dated August 12, 2024 confirming that copyright claims on the same episode have been released after dispute.
Figure 26. The renewed claim is again released following dispute.
YouTube email notification dated August 15, 2024 informing Arabeem that copyrighted content has again been detected in the same video, now claimed by Quoich Takwene as an audio-only claim.
Figure 27. A further claim — this time as an audio-only claim on the same television episode.

Takedown notices identifying our own video as the protected work

In several takedown notices we observed that the field describing the underlying protected work listed our own video’s title (and in some cases its YouTube Video ID). DMCA notices are required to identify the protected work being infringed (17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3)(A)(ii)). Where that field reproduces the allegedly infringing video’s own title, the notice was — at minimum — likely completed without careful attention.

YouTube takedown notification email body in which the field labeled 'Content used' contains the exact same title as the removed video, suggesting the field was completed without identifying a separate protected work.
Figure 28. A takedown notice in which the protected-work field appears to duplicate the title of the affected video.
Additional YouTube takedown notification email bodies in which the 'Content used' field is filled either with the affected video's own title or with the literal word 'Takedown'.
Figure 29. Further notices showing the same pattern — in some cases, the literal word “Takedown” in the protected-work field.
§ 08 — October 19, 2023

A Direct Approach.

A single, preserved screenshot of a self-deleting email we received from one of the claimants.

On October 19, 2023, we received an email at copyright@arabeem.com from socialmedia@art-tv.com.jo with the subject line “Re: Clarification!”. The sender proposed that, in exchange for our agreement to permit the use of certain of our works, the outstanding takedown notices would be withdrawn, with a 24-hour deadline for our response. The message was sent using a confidential email service that, by design, deletes the message a short time after delivery; we preserved only a single screenshot and PDF before the message expired.

We declined to engage with the proposal. We mention this episode here because we believe it speaks directly to the nature of the dispute, and because our ability to preserve any evidence of it at all was a matter of timing rather than transparency on the sender’s part.

§ 09 — March – April 2025

Recent Correspondence.

Our most recent attempts to engage YouTube’s senior support.

On March 26, 2025, after we indicated we would be publishing this statement, an agent of YouTube’s Partner Support team replied that they acknowledged “the gravity of the allegations,” recognized that the experience had “fallen short” of what we should expect, and committed to transfer case 7-7589000038790 to a specialist team with a 24–48 hour update timeline. We were genuinely grateful for that reply.

On April 1, 2025, a manager on the YouTube Support Experience team replied that the channel had been terminated under thread 6-1925000037188 for submitting “abusive legal requests,” that there was “nothing else” YouTube could do, and that we were now barred from contacting the support team for thirty days, with a permanent block to follow if we “persist with this behavior.” We respectfully note that we still have not received an itemized explanation of which of our submissions are considered abusive, nor any documentation that would allow us to address the underlying concern.

Thread 6-1925000037188 itself began with a more constructive communication on October 31, 2024, escalating the matter to “a specialist with deeper copyright expertise.” Four days later, on November 4, 2024, the case was closed with the same conclusion of “abusive legal requests” and no further detail.

Support cases of record

6-5689000038263  2-3788000038033  6-8285000037058  4-6984000037540  4-1277000036928  0-1633000037486  4-933000037045  7-7589000038790  6-1925000037188  7-5742000035210  6-2234000035581

§ 10 — Legal Framework

The Framework We Believe Should Apply.

Raised in the interest of clarity, not confrontation.

DMCA
17 U.S.C. § 512(c), § 512(f), § 512(g) — the takedown, counter-notification, and misrepresentation framework that governs every step of this dispute.
Copyright
17 U.S.C. § 106, § 501, § 1202(b) — exclusive rights, infringement, and removal of copyright management information (including thumbnail and logo stripping).
International
Berne Convention, Article 6bis — moral rights, including attribution.
U.S. Code
15 U.S.C. § 1125 — false designations of origin.
§ 11 — Requests

What We Are Respectfully Requesting.

Five clear, measured asks of YouTube and other parties of good will.

  1. That YouTube re-open our matter at a senior level and conduct an independent review of the full evidence package, including the Egyptian court ruling and the cross-document forensic analysis, before treating our termination as final.
  2. That YouTube examine the entitlement of the entities making large-scale Content ID claims against Egyptian cinematic and television heritage — including Quoich – Takwene, ART TV Network, Arab Reach Media – Sa7i, and QMG Affiliate — and verify those entitlements are properly documented.
  3. That regulators and competent authorities in the relevant jurisdictions be invited to review the file. We are prepared to cooperate fully with any such review.
  4. That the journalistic community examine the issue of orphaned cultural-heritage works on global platforms and the conditions that have allowed entitlement claims of this scale to remain unchallenged for so long.
  5. That, where rights to the underlying material genuinely vest in lawful successors, the works are correctly attributed and properly compensated — and not directed by default to whichever party files first in the Content ID system.

Part Two — The Broader Pattern

Beyond Our Channel — The Broader Pattern We Encountered

The following section concerns a wider matter we observed during our dispute. It is not, strictly speaking, part of our case against the termination of our channel — but it is factually connected, and we believe it is of independent public-interest value. A reader interested only in the core case may proceed directly to Evidence (§ 13) and Closing (§ 15).

§ 12 — The Wider Concern

Egyptian Cinematic & Television Heritage.

A pattern we observed during our dispute that extends far beyond Arabeem TV Network — and which, in our respectful view, deserves examination by all parties of good will.

Egyptian cinema and television produced from the 1950s through the 1990s — a body of work of enormous cultural significance across the Arab world — sits in a particularly vulnerable position. Many of the production companies that originally owned these works are now dormant, dissolved, or otherwise no longer in a position to actively manage their rights on global platforms.

During our dispute we observed what appears to be a coordinated practice in which entities including Quoich – Takwene, ART TV Network, and two further accounts known as Arab Reach Media – Sa7i and QMG Affiliate have been issuing Content ID claims and takedown notices against a very large number of these older Arabic-language films and television episodes uploaded by third parties — including some uploaded by us. We do not believe these entities are the lawful rights-holders of much of this material. The effect of the claims — whether by directing monetization to the claimant or by blocking the content outright — is, in practical terms, the transfer of revenue and control over Arab cinematic heritage to parties whose entitlement we believe ought to be examined carefully.

A documented tag-team pattern

We observed a recurring sequence. A claim would be filed by Arab Reach Media – Sa7i with a “block” policy. We would dispute — including by escalation to appeal where the block policy permitted it. The claimant would let the seven-day response window lapse and the claim would be released for non-review. Within hours, an effectively identical claim would re-appear on the same video, this time issued by Quoich – Takwene with a “monetize” policy. We would dispute again. Mid-dispute, the policy would in some cases be silently changed from monetize to block — keeping the video unavailable to viewers during a now-extended thirty-day review window.

YouTube email notification confirming that Arabeem's appeal has been submitted on a copyright claim filed by Arab Reach Media Sa7i on the video Saeedy F El-Gamaa El Amerikia.
Figure 31. The appeal stage of a Content ID dispute against Arab Reach Media – Sa7i.
YouTube email notification confirming the claim has been released because the dispute was not reviewed within thirty days.
Figure 32. The claim is released following non-review.
YouTube email notification dated July 12 informing Arabeem that copyrighted content has been detected in the same video, now claimed by Quoich Takwene.
Figure 33. Within hours, a substantively similar claim is filed against the same video by Quoich – Takwene.
YouTube notification email titled 'Video is blocked' informing Arabeem that the same video has been blocked due to a claim from Arab Reach Media Sa7i.
Figure 34. A second example: Arab Reach Media – Sa7i blocks another of our videos.
YouTube email notification informing Arabeem that copyrighted content has been detected in the same video and is now claimed by Quoich Takwene.
Figure 35. The same video is again claimed within hours — this time by Quoich – Takwene.

Background of the entities involved

Arab Reach Media – Sa7i is the operator of Sa7i, a sports- and entertainment-oriented YouTube channel with a meaningful audience that, to the best of our knowledge, has not published new content since 2022. After we publicly indicated that we would be sharing our evidence with the authorities responsible for investigating fraud and corruption, the two principal websites associated with the entity — armadco.com and sa7i.com — were taken offline.

Facebook page snapshot for Arab Reach Media Services Co. LTD ARM, based in Jeddah, with cover text 'We are interested in your success because it means that our strategy is effective'.
Figure 36. Public Facebook profile of Arab Reach Media Services, registered in Jeddah.
Facebook page snapshot for the Sa7i entertainment channel with 406k likes and 422k followers, indicating it was active from 2012 with a focus on youth programming.
Figure 37. The Sa7i Facebook page indicating an entertainment focus and origin.
GoDaddy parking page showing that the domain sa7i.com is no longer in active use and is now parked for sale.
Figure 38. The sa7i.com domain is no longer in active use.
Safari browser error message indicating the domain armadco.net cannot be reached because the server cannot be found.
Figure 39. The armadco domain also appears to be offline.
Thousands of older Eygptian cinematic, television, and theatrical works are being claimed for ownership at scale — in circumstances where many of the original production companies that owned them are no longer in active operation.

A simple Google search restricted to YouTube URLs returns thousands of videos showing the “content from Arab Reach Media – Sa7i” block message in jurisdictions including ours, covering a substantial portion of the classic Eygptian cinematic catalogue. We respectfully submit that the volume itself is reason for the platform to look closely at the underlying entitlement of the claimant.

Google search results showing classic Eygptian films blocked under Arab Reach Media Sa7i copyright claims
Additional Google search results page of Egyptian cinema blocked under Sa7i claims
Further Google results showing Egyptian films blocked by Sa7i
Google search results showing more Egyptian classic content blocked
Further Google search evidence of blocked Egyptian cinema
Google search page showing widespread Sa7i claims on Egyptian content
Continued Google search results showing the scale of claims
Further pages showing classic Egyptian films blocked under Sa7i
Additional Google search pages of blocked Egyptian theatrical content
Google search results continuing to demonstrate scope of Sa7i claims
More search result pages showing the extensive scale of claims
Further Google search results showing claims on Egyptian heritage
Google search results showing Egyptian films blocked under the same claimant
Search results showing widespread blocking of Egyptian content
Continued evidence of Sa7i copyright claims on Egyptian cinema
Further Google search results showing the scope of claims on Egyptian works
Additional pages of Google search results showing systematic claims
More Google search evidence pages of Sa7i claims
Google search results continuing to show widespread claims
Further Google search results pages of blocked Egyptian films
Final pages of Google search evidence showing extensive claims

Exhibit Gallery — Pages of Google search results showing the scale of Egyptian cinematic and theatrical works currently blocked or claimed under the Arab Reach Media – Sa7i identifier.

An earlier related case (2023)

The pattern we describe above is not new. As early as 2023 we observed and reported a closely related sequence involving the same broader network. A claim was filed by QMG Affiliate on a video uploaded by us on April 21, 2023, was disputed, escalated to appeal, and the takedown notice was eventually rejected by YouTube. We submitted this evidence to YouTube under case 4-6356000034394, and YouTube — to its credit — restricted QMG Affiliate’s use of the Content ID tool at that time.

On September 2, 2023, the same effective claim re-appeared on the same video, but the claimant was now Arab Reach Media – Sa7i. When we filed our appeal, YouTube’s revenue-analytics system still identified the claim as the original April 21 claim — strongly suggesting that the underlying asset and reference in the Content ID database had not changed between the two claimants. We respectfully submit that this is direct, system-level evidence that these accounts are operated by, or in coordination with, the same actor.

YouTube email notification showing a Content ID copyright claim was created by QMG Affiliate on the Arabic theatrical play Al-Eyal Kabret
YouTube email confirming that the Al-Eyal Kabret video has been blocked due to the copyright claim
YouTube email showing a separate copyright claim on the same theatrical play
Further copyright claim notification on the same theatrical play
YouTube email warning that the account will be disabled in 7 days due to copyright claims
YouTube response to counter-notification filed by Arabeem TV Network
YouTube Studio channel content view from April 22, 2023 showing the original upload
YouTube Studio view from September 2023 showing the same content now affected by additional claims
YouTube revenue analytics screenshot showing that the Content ID system treated the September 2023 claim from Arab Reach Media Sa7i as identical to the April 2023 claim from QMG Affiliate
Exhibit — Revenue Analytics. YouTube’s own revenue analytics view treats the September 2023 Arab Reach Media – Sa7i claim as the same claim originally filed by QMG Affiliate in April 2023, indicating the same underlying Content ID reference is being re-used across what are presented as different claimants.

A second video — same pattern (Video ID: MYj076otGTU)

We observed the identical sequence on a second video.

YouTube confirmation that an appeal has been submitted on a copyright claim against a second video
YouTube email notification that the comedy play Sek Aly Banatak has been blocked due to a copyright claim
YouTube warning that account will be disabled in 7 days
YouTube response to Arabeem's counter-notification on the second video
YouTube notification that some videos have been taken down
Revenue analytics screenshot for the second video showing the same pattern of claim continuity across different claimants
Exhibit — Revenue Analytics. The same pattern visible on the second video.

A third video — same pattern (Video ID: Wad-S-E)

And on a third video — the comedy play featuring Adel Imam — we again documented the identical sequence of claims, counter-notifications, and re-claims across different claimants.

YouTube notification that the comedy play Al-Wad Said Al-Shaghaal featuring Adel Imam will be taken down in 7 days
YouTube email confirming the Adel Imam play has been blocked due to a copyright claim
YouTube takedown notification on the third video
YouTube counter-notification response on the third video
YouTube Content ID claim creation on the same video by a different claimant
Subsequent Content ID claim on the same video
Further Content ID claim on the same video
YouTube notification that the third video has been blocked again following further claims
Further notification of the third video being blocked
Composite documentation panel for the third video showing the complete sequence of claims
Exhibit — Documentation Panel. Composite view of the claim sequence on the third video.
Revenue analytics screenshot for the third video showing the recurring pattern of claim continuity
Exhibit — Revenue Analytics. The same recurring pattern visible across all three videos.

Two further theatrical works — claims that went unanswered

Two additional theatrical works in our library, with YouTube Video IDs OnNmH2uMF9M and vi9fJzYgRcc, were also subject to Content ID claims by Arab Reach Media – Sa7i. We disputed; the matter escalated to counter-notifications; the claimant did not respond — as one would not expect them to, given that they are not in a position to file a substantive copyright action against the original rights-holder.

YouTube notification that videos have been taken down
YouTube Studio view of the affected channel content
YouTube counter-notification response on one of the theatrical works
Further YouTube Studio view showing affected content
Counter-notification response on the second theatrical work
§ 13 — Evidence

Evidence on Public Record.

Primary documents available for any qualified investigator, journalist, or regulator who wishes to review them.

Exhibit 01

Forensic Analysis of the Four Documents Submitted by Quoich – Takwene and ART TV Network

Open
Exhibit 02

October 2023 Takedown Wave — Email Archive

Open
Exhibit 03

Arabeem Case (ART TV Network filing)

Open
Exhibit 04

combined.pdf / combined(6).pdf — Quoich – Takwene

Open
Exhibit 05

Wanes Case (ART TV Network filing)

Open
Exhibit 06

October 2024 Re-Removal of Reinstated Videos — Email Archive

Open
Exhibit 07

Support Case 7-5742000035210

Open
Exhibit 08

Support Case 6-2234000035581

Open
Exhibit 09

Arabeem Case.pdf — Original

Open
Exhibit 10

combinepdf (6).pdf — Original

Open
Exhibit 11

Wanes Case.pdf — Original

Open
Exhibit 12

combinepdf.pdf — Original

Open
Exhibit 13

June 2024 Takedown Wave — Email Archive

Open
Exhibit 14

August 2024 Takedown Wave — Email Archive

Open
§ 13-B — The Affected Works

The Affected Works, Grouped by What Happened to Them.

The video identifiers below are grouped into three categories according to how each was treated over the course of the dispute. Read together, the three groups make visible the same asymmetry described in § 06 — this time in the form of specific works a reviewer can open and check.

We set out below, for the record and for any reviewer, the YouTube video identifiers affected in this matter, grouped by what actually happened to each. We believe the grouping is itself informative. The first group was treated very differently from the second and third — and the sequence connecting the three groups helps explain why the disputed documents examined in § 06-C came to exist at all.

Group 1 — Taken down by ART TV Network, restored, then re-removed

These 88 works were taken down in the October 2023 wave, restored by YouTube in April 2024 following our counter-notifications and the Egyptian court ruling, and then re-removed in October 2024 — the reversal described in § 05 and § 06. This is the group that did not remain restored.

OnNmH2uMF9M7GDThQ3HeBE9sxXagAF6EwR420U8rBTssU_gs9scXY9gx7U28Z4VAxsDb9i-B7EHNkPO-cMgSS6e0VLnKRHqhBFAk3WM3fx4pSIyNKwkTvlUokH4vbk14y2fUIsGoZzNg6pcM16801ZhgUAWt-4PH2WPcwlHDulAdosy0d6ajnTC--vkgF-5oogB7b8BguQfaRCr-0SSaOiDB8Y_MTQHbxMi80UwY7YvvSOCYFkYlNkTZdXydk1QAXJZJVU9wRIKbfhAi1eAcHx177lQLwEnqLcamot8BEyxeNadQ3KB85UD6SA3Dxv0H1ItulTzeHkct3MKdDWnL8h_-vEHCN3ecn6x3MRwdrB8-GHPcOIRwAU58H9Zvz9qM0MEOnVSZDheEX7AYQk3JfEAgaShSgZMzRYDdtDPqYslWwJaIBbMakWa0_0K1bxy3ZKccUIuZRylY5IslDqLrlDWYwR-tj6ktVDfIdEKsBkNedKoe0PkyB6g96YoKTRHdTvLiAuSBnxhnFZgUMFas8QJaI8gTknoNKi7JowkScJZbO085cpZAhwEFfXyMyLxOFB9VVS829i8UMzKndQ795wawjYfHUDoHtOi7RKnsJyEoacmO3pQpakYEy2KCR4EeHzHP8zu0gHXVIKd32M_AcFrSQuVibA0gujbBjOd0iIy4kWi8ruf8AH7IUOxYFEf4HgFcitgcdGkOdtrFqscQjwaoB6jlrSa6IxjgVxJokp-cE2YVFwGN_woViTJa9SHyN4c7ZLESPrVV4gDrupLmOR1Eq-XW2dcUGDY7mN55umm4cQKzcxGyBuhQsXpOlMOCrkwwcwrJ06pz2uIsiC7VB2tZSk2RZYWQPXQDUKbff7sUPoLESID2Px-XwNgSSefUhva_msSzESebVoTuoArFu1plUU5UHOhnlr-Y70IXs0_xt0Iu1AYH4dz4EzIj8dmDfPGFnbXQ

Group 2 — Taken down by Quoich – Takwene, restored, and still restored

These 4 works were restored and, to this day, remain restored. They are also the works named in the later documents (the combinepdf files examined in § 06-C) that were presented as if they evidenced fresh, separate legal actions.

Group 3 — Quoich – Takwene’s first wave, restored after the claimant did not respond

In the first wave, a large volume of takedown notices was issued. When we answered with counter-notifications, the claimant — not being in a position to substantiate ownership — did not respond within the statutory window, and these 23 works were restored automatically under § 512(g).

How the three groups connect — and why the documents appeared

The sequence we observed, and which the grouping above reflects, is the following. In the first wave (Group 3), a large number of takedown notices were filed; when met with counter-notifications they went unanswered, and the works were restored for non-response. A claimant that repeatedly sends takedowns and then fails to answer counter-notifications risks attracting scrutiny from the platform for exactly that pattern.

It was after that point that the disputed documents examined in § 06-C appeared — presented as if they were fresh, separate legal actions, and listing the Group 2 works. In our respectful submission, the documents are best understood not as the origin of the dispute but as a later response to it: an attempt to supply, after the fact, the appearance of legal proceedings that the unanswered counter-notifications had shown to be missing. We state this as the reading the record supports; we do not assert any individual’s intent.

Note — 115 identifiers in total across the three groups. Each is a live YouTube link; some may be unavailable depending on the current status of the underlying upload. The list is provided for verification by any qualified reviewer and is not exhaustive of every notice in the dispute.

§ 14 — Live Documents

The Documents, Open for Inspection.

Every document referenced in this statement is reproduced below in full, openly viewable. The forensic analysis comes first, followed by the four disputed legal documents side by side, and then the complete supporting case archives.

Forensic Analysis of the Four Disputed Documents

Our complete forensic study of the four documents submitted by Quoich – Takwene and ART TV Network, including side-by-side seal-placement comparisons, editable-PDF-layer findings, and translations.

Document 01 Forensic Analysis — Quoich Takwene & ART TV Network Documents Open in new tab ↗

The Four Disputed Documents

Reproduced here side by side so the structural similarities between supposedly independent legal filings are immediately visible. Click any document title to open in full.

Document 09 Arabeem Case.pdf Open ↗
Submitted by: ART TV Network  ·  Names as plaintiff: Sunnyland Film Cyprus
Document 10 combinepdf (6).pdf Open ↗
Submitted by: Quoich – Takwene  ·  Concern: Editable text layer; appears derived from Document 09 (Arabeem Case)
Document 11 Wanes Case.pdf Open ↗
Submitted by: ART TV Network  ·  Concern: Stamped receipt rather than substantive filing
Document 12 combinepdf.pdf Open ↗
Submitted by: Quoich – Takwene  ·  Concern: Appears derived from Document 11 (Wanes Case)

Supporting Case Archives

The complete email archives of each takedown wave, plus YouTube’s own case files. Each document is fully embedded below; use the “Open” link to view in a dedicated tab.

Document 02 October 2023 Takedown Wave — Email Archive Open ↗
Document 03 Example — ART TV Network’s Use of the Arabeem Case.pdf Open ↗
Document 04 Example — Quoich – Takwene’s Use of Forged Combined.pdf & combined(6).pdf Open ↗
Document 05 Example — ART TV Network’s Use of the Forged Wanes Case.pdf Open ↗
Document 06 October 2024 Re-Removal of Reinstated Videos — Email Archive Open ↗
Document 07 Support Case 7-5742000035210 Open ↗
Document 08 Support Case 6-2234000035581 Open ↗
Document 13 June 2024 Takedown Wave — Email Archive Open ↗
Document 14 August 2024 Takedown Wave — Email Archive Open ↗
§ 15 — Closing

Closing Remarks.

This is not, and is not intended to be, an indictment of YouTube. It is a public, documented appeal — written in good faith, with all evidence on the table, and with full acknowledgment of the genuine difficulty of operating a platform of YouTube’s scale. We continue to admire much of what the platform has built for creators.

We do believe, however, that our specific matter merits a fresh, senior, transparent review; that the broader question of who lawfully holds the rights to the foundational works of Egyptian cinema deserves close examination by all parties of good will; and that the creator community will be better served, not worse, by an open conversation about how disputes of this kind should be handled in future.

We thank YouTube’s teams for the work they have done with us to date, including the agents who restored our content in April, June, and September 2024 and the Partner Support representatives who took our concerns seriously. We respectfully ask that the door, even briefly closed by the recent thirty-day communication restriction, be re-opened so that our matter can be considered afresh.

We are available to any reviewer, journalist, or rights-holder who wishes to speak with us. We will share every email, every document, every case number, and every video URL on request, without redaction other than as required to protect the privacy of named individuals not central to the underlying issue.

We have, over the past two years, exhausted every constructive channel available to us through YouTube’s normal procedures. We have filed proper counter-notifications. We have submitted a court ruling. We have provided forensic evidence. We have opened and re-opened more than eleven support cases. We have written, respectfully, more times than we can count. The record of those efforts speaks for itself.

Whatever YouTube chooses to do from here — to re-engage with the matter, to maintain the current position, or to remain silent — the documentation now sits in the public domain, and it is unlikely to be retracted, edited, or softened. We trust that the evidence will, in time, be evaluated on its own terms by every party of good will who chooses to read it.

We do not write this in anger. We write it because for two years we have asked, quietly and in detail, for our matter to be looked at properly. The record, as it now stands, no longer requires us to argue the case. It requires only that someone, somewhere, with the authority to do so, choose to read it. Arabeem TV Network · Press Office

2 Responses

  1. I’m genuinely shocked, what is the connection between ART or any of these entities mentioned in press release and Egyptian cinematic heritage? Aren’t they Saudi and jordanian? Ooooh wait, i get it. It is because Egyptian cinema has always been superior😒, and these countries could never reach 10% of its historical success. they don’t even have films or series of their own worth mentioning.. That is why they are so greedy for Egypt achievments. They feel like they own Egypt because they have a lot of money, they thought they can buy anything. What A SHAME. 😡 YouTube must investgate with the Arabian Employee that i feel within myself that who protect those people are Saudis 🥵

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