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::Leuk dat je hier mee bezig gaat! Ik wil graag bijdragen, maar ik doe nog even geen beloftes. {{Gebruiker:Vviktorie!!/handtekening2}} 20 jan 2019 22:07 (CET)
 
::Leuk dat je hier mee bezig gaat! Ik wil graag bijdragen, maar ik doe nog even geen beloftes. {{Gebruiker:Vviktorie!!/handtekening2}} 20 jan 2019 22:07 (CET)
  
== T-Series ==
+
T-series is een rivaal van pewdiepie daar kenne de meeste mensen T-series van
 +
 
 +
Super Cassettes Industries Private Limited
 +
T-series-logo.svg
 +
Trading name
 +
T-Series
 +
Type
 +
Private
 +
Industry Entertainment
 +
Founded 11 July 1983; 35 years ago in Delhi, India[1]
 +
Founder Gulshan Kumar
 +
Headquarters Noida, India[2]
 +
Key people
 +
Bhushan Kumar (Chairman & Managing Director)
 +
Krishan Kumar
 +
Neeraj Kalyan[3]
 +
Services Music record label
 +
Film production
 +
Owner
 +
Bhushan Kumar (1983–97)
 +
Krishan Kumar (1997–present)
 +
YouTube information
 +
Channel
 +
T-Series
 +
Years active 2006–present
 +
Genre
 +
Music videos Film trailers
 +
Subscribers 81 million
 +
(18 January 2019)
 +
Total views 59.1 billion
 +
(18 January 2019)
 +
Play buttons
 +
Subscriber and view counts updated as of 14 January 2019.
 +
Website T-Series
 +
Super Cassettes Industries Private Limited, doing business as T-Series,[note 1][1][2] is an Indian music record label and film production company founded by Gulshan Kumar in 1983.[5] It is primarily known for Bollywood music soundtracks[5] and Indi-pop music.[6] As of 2014, T-Series is India's largest music record label, with up to 35% share of the Indian music market, followed by Sony Music India and Zee Music.[7]
 +
 
 +
Kumar, initially a fruit juice seller in Delhi, founded T-Series as a company to sell pirated Bollywood songs, before they eventually began producing new music. Their breakthrough came with the soundtrack for the 1988 Bollywood blockbuster Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak, composed by Anand-Milind, written by Majrooh Sultanpuri, and starring Aamir Khan and Juhi Chawla, which became one of the best-selling Indian music albums of the 1980s, with over 8 million sales. They eventually became a leading music label with the release of Aashiqui (1990), composed by Nadeem–Shravan, which sold 20 million copies and became the best-selling Indian soundtrack album of all time.[8] However, Gulshan Kumar was murdered by the Mumbai mafia syndicate D-Company in 1997. Since then, T-Series has been led by his son Bhushan Kumar and younger brother Krishan Kumar.
 +
 
 +
On YouTube, T-Series has a multi-channel network, with 29 channels that have more than 140 million subscribers as of January 2019[3] and 61.5 billion views as of August 2018.[9] The company's YouTube team consists of 13 people at the T-Series headquarters.[10] The company's main T-Series channel on YouTube primarily shows music videos as well as film trailers. In January 2017, it became the most-viewed YouTube channel, with over 59 billion views as of 18 January 2019.[11] With over 81 million subscribers as of 18 January 2019, it also ranks as the second most-subscribed channel behind PewDiePie.[12]
  
T-series is een rivaal van pewdiepie daar kenne de meeste mensen T-series van
+
 
 +
Contents
 +
1 History
 +
2 YouTube presence
 +
3 Legal
 +
4 List of artists
 +
5 Production filmography
 +
5.1 1990s
 +
5.2 2000s
 +
5.3 2010s
 +
6 Soundtrack discography
 +
6.1 Bollywood
 +
6.2 Tamil
 +
6.3 International
 +
7 See also
 +
8 Notes
 +
9 References
 +
10 External links
 +
History
 +
 
 +
Gulshan Kumar (1956‑1997), the founder of T-Series
 +
 
 +
Krishan Kumar (left) and CEO Bhushan Kumar (right), the brother and son of Gulshan Kumar, respectively, during the audio release of Aashiqui 2 (2013)
 +
T-Series was founded on July 11, 1983,[13] by Gulshan Kumar,[14] at the time an obscure fruit juice seller in the Daryaganj neighbourhood of Delhi.[15] The company initially sold pirated Bollywood songs, prior to releasing original music.[16]
 +
 
 +
Kumar discovered that there was a market for devotional music, and began recording and selling them. Kumar noticed that many elderly Hindu followers could not read the hymns and chants because of failing eyesight, so Kumar hired singers to record the chants and sold them as cheap cassettes. Later, he filmed major Hindu pilgrimages in India and sold them on VHS and video cassette tapes.[17]
 +
 
 +
T-Series' first original film soundtrack release was for Lallu Ram in 1984, with music scored by Ravindra Jain.[citation needed] The company's breakthrough came when it released the soundtrack for the 1988 Bollywood blockbuster Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak (also known as QSQT),[18] directed by Mansoor Khan and starring Aamir Khan and Juhi Chawla. The Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak soundtrack, composed by Anand-Milind and written by Majrooh Sultanpuri, became the best-selling Indian soundtrack album of 1988 and one of the best-selling Indian soundtrack albums of the 1980s,[19] with more than 8 million units sold.[20] The biggest hit song from the album was "Papa Kehte Hain", sung by Udit Narayan and picturised on Aamir Khan.[21][22] T-Series founder Gulshan Kumar soon played a key role in Bollywood's cassette boom of the late 1980s with his affordable T-Series albums.[23]
 +
 
 +
T-Series later became a leading music label with the release of Aashiqui (1990),[16] a film soundtrack album composed by duo Nadeem–Shravan, which sold 20 million units in India,[24] and is the best-selling Bollywood soundtrack album of all time.[8] A cover version of "Dheere Dheere" from Aashiqui was later sung by Yo Yo Honey Singh and released by T-Series in 2015.
 +
 
 +
T-Series was largely responsible for sparking a boom for the Indian music industry in the early 1990s.[25] Many of the best-selling Bollywood music albums of the 1990s, particularly those composed by Nadeem–Shravan, were released under the T-Series label.[8] Besides music production, the company also began venturing into film production.[26] The annual earnings of T-Series grew from ₹200 million ($16 million) in 1985 to ₹2 billion ($88 million) in 1991,[27][28] and by 1997 had reached ₹5 billion[29] ($140 million).[30]
 +
 
 +
In 1997, T-Series founder Gulshan Kumar was murdered by the Mumbai mafia syndicate D-Company.[29] His assassination also led to T-Series losing its most prolific musicians at the time, Nadeem–Shravan, due to Nadeem Akhtar Saifi initially being accused of involvement in the murder, before later being exonerated.[31][32][33] After Gulshan Kumar's death in 1997, the company has since been led by his son Bhushan Kumar,[34] with the help of Gulshan's younger brother Krishan Kumar.
 +
 
 +
As a film production company, the highest-grossing T-Series film production to date is the critically acclaimed sleeper hit Hindi Medium (2017), written by Zeenat Lakhani, directed by Saket Chaudhary, and starring Irrfan Khan and Saba Qamar.[35] It grossed ₹3.224 billion ($50 million) worldwide,[36] with $34 million in China alone,[37] becoming one of the top 20 highest-grossing Indian films of all time.[38] T-Series' and one of the most expensive Indian films will be Saaho,[39] a sci-fi thriller with a production budget of ₹3 billion (US$42 million), scheduled for release in 2019.[40][41] T-Series is also producing a biopic film based on the life of its founder Gulshan Kumar, called Mogul, which is currently under production and is scheduled for release in 2019.
 +
 
 +
YouTube presence
 +
 
 +
Further information: PewDiePie vs T-Series
 +
T-Series joined YouTube on 13 March 2006, but only started uploading videos in late 2010. Under this channel, T-Series primarily shows music videos and film trailers. By July 2013, it had crossed 1 billion views, becoming the second Indian YouTube channel to cross the milestone after Rajshri Productions.[42] In January 2017, T-Series surpassed PewDiePie to become the world's most-viewed YouTube channel,[43][11][44][45] and as of 19 December 2018 it has 56 billion views.[12] The T-Series YouTube channel is run by a team of 13 people at the T-Series headquarters.[10]
 +
 
 +
The YouTube channel has reached 75 million subscribers, making it the second most-subscribed YouTube channel after PewDiePie. Currently, it is the most subscribed Asian and non-English-language YouTube channel. Reaching 50 million subscribers, the channel received a Custom Play Button on September 10, 2018.[46] It is also the second channel ever to hit 70 million subscribers.[12] Beyond this, the channel earns an average of nearly 150,000 subscribers a day.[47][48]
 +
 
 +
T-Series channel also owns a multi-channel network, with 29 channels,[3] which include YouTube channels such as T-Series Tamil, T-Series Telugu,[9] and Bollywood Classics.[49] On top of this, six of their channels are among the top 100 most-subscribed channels in India, including T-Series, Bhakti Sagar, Apna Punjab, T-Series Regional, Lahari Music, and T-Series Telugu.[50] T-Series' 29 channels have accumulated a total of more than 100 million YouTube subscribers as of November 2018,[3] and 61.5 billion views as of August 2018.[9] During January–July 2018, T-Series earned an income of ₹7.2 billion (US$100 million) from YouTube.[9] The most popular T-Series artist on YouTube is Guru Randhawa, whose 2017 song "Lahore" has crossed 700 million views on YouTube.[51]
 +
 
 +
The growth of T-Series' YouTube channel has been attributed to India's emerging online population. India currently has 500 million Internet users and this number is expected to grow rapidly.[52] A major breakthrough in India's Internet growth came in September 2016 with India's first 4G network, Reliance Jio, offering data at very low costs.[14] India has since emerged as the world's second-largest online population (behind China, where YouTube is blocked), with YouTube alone having over 225 million monthly Indian users. India's high demand for YouTube content and the lack of local content creators has contributed significantly to the rapid growth of T-Series.[53]
 +
 
 +
The growth of T-Series is also attributed to its growing audience outside of India.[14] About 40% of the channel's traffic comes from outside of India,[3] including 12% from the United States.[14] The majority of the channel's overseas viewers belong to the global South Asian diaspora. More recently, the channel's overseas viewership has increased further, as a result of attention and controversy drawn to the channel by foreign YouTubers such as PewDiePie and MrBeast.[3] YouTubers such as MrBeast and Justin Roberts made videos which were in support of PewDiePie[54][55][56] to keep him as the most-subscribed channel on YouTube.[57]
 +
 
 +
Legal
 +
In November 2007, T-Series filed a lawsuit against YouTube for infringing on the copyright of its music by allowing users to upload videos of its music onto YouTube, which could be accessed for free and obtained an interim order against YouTube from the Delhi High Court, which restrained YouTube from infringing on its copyright.[58][59] T-Series and YouTube settled out of court in January 2011.[59]

Versie van 21 jan 2019 09:34

Welkom in de Boomhut!
Boomhut1.png

Welkom in de Boomhut van WikiKids! Hier kun je als gebruiker je vragen stellen aan andere gebruikers of moderatoren over hoe WikiKids werkt, en hoe je kan helpen. Heb je een vraag? Klik dan op "nieuw bericht" bovenaan de pagina of klik hieronder om direct een nieuwe vraag te stellen!

  • Oude vragen vind je in het archief van de Boomhut.


Klik hier om een vraag over WikiKids te stellen!
WikiBanner-1.gif

Goedkeuren aanvragen Boomhut

Aangezien Wouter de Boomhut heeft gearchiveerd (no offence) voordat ik antwoord had op de vorige berichten, hierbij het volgende:

  • Voorstel Project:Turkije: Aangezien we het niet echt eens werden over het onderwerp (en we iets meer dan een week hebben om alles te regelen) heb ik Turkije als onderwerp gekozen (zie link voor motivatie). Ik zou graag dit project wegens de professionaliteit van WikiKids in de WikiKids-naamruimte willen zetten, zoals op andere wiki's tevens gebruikelijk is. Is dit mogelijk?
  • Voorstel nieuwe afbeeldingen van de week: Na jaren dezelfde afbeeldingen van de week te hebben gehad wil ik deze graag door nieuwe vervangen. Tot nu toe heeft enkel Rots61 hierop gereageerd; ik hoor graag of er meer suggesties, opmerkingen, etc. zijn.
  • Voorstel Portaal:Zwitserland: Definitief voorstel voor Portaal:Zwitserland als uitbreiding op de nieuwe WikiKidsAtlas. Banner bovenaan de pagina, project- en inschrijfpagina worden nog gemaakt. Mijn vraag is of deze versie is goedgekeurd om echt portaal te worden?

Met vriendelijke groet, Noto Emoji v2.034 2744.svg Mike1023 Noto Emoji v2.034 2744.svg 20 jan 2019 20:12 (CET)

Sorry Mike! Ik was misschien iets te enthousiast met het archiveren van de Boomhut. Wouter15 overleg · (MOD). 20 jan 2019 20:32 (CET)
  1. Turkije lijkt me een erg leuk onderwerp voor een project. Eventueel zou het project zelfs uitgebreid kunnen worden met Marokko, dat ook een belangrijk herkomstland van Nederlandse migranten is. De WikiKids-naamruimte kan hier mijns inziens goed voor gebruikt worden.
  2. Ik vind de plaatjes heel mooi, maar het lijkt me ook leuk als we wat plaatjes hebben die door WikiKids-gebruikers zelf zijn gemaakt. Daarnaast is het ook leuk als de plaatjes overeenkomen met het onderwerp dat die week actueel is, zoals bij kerstmis en nieuwjaar. Wat mij betreft hoeven dan ook niet alle huidige afbeeldingen van de week weg.
  3. Erg mooi portaal, komt er ook nog een portaal-laatje? Verder zeker geschikt. Groet, Dollar symbol gold.svgVviktorie!! Overleg 20 jan 2019 22:15 (CET)
  1. Dankjewel. Ik zou het leuk vinden om ieder jaar een land aanpakken waaruit veel "Nederlanders met niet-Nederlandse migratieachtergrond" hun wortels hebben, dus Marokko is denk ik voor een volgende editie uitermate geschikt.
  2. Ik kan het eventueel zo doen dat ik circa de helft vervang en de andere helft volgend jaar vervang. Ik ga wel wat aanpassen qua evenementen en plaatjes van gebruikers.
  3. Plaatje komt er zeker. Ik kijk of ik hem morgen kan maken. Noto Emoji v2.034 2744.svg Mike1023 Noto Emoji v2.034 2744.svg 20 jan 2019 23:28 (CET)

Het WikikidsWoordenboek!

Toegevoegd aan het WikikidsWoordenboek: de basiswoordenlijsten voor de groepen 5 en 7, want die ontbraken nog. Wat de trefwoorden aangaat is het woordenboek nu compleet. De woordverklaring van de trefwoorden van de groepen 4, 5, 6 en 7 moet echter nog gedaan worden. Wie heeft interesse om een echte woordenboekredacteur te worden? Schrijf je dus snel in, want het zal wel storm lopen, schat ik zo in! PS: zogenaamde encyclopediewoorden kun je overslaan. Dat zijn dus de woorden die een uitgebreid artikel behoeven en dat is niet de bedoeling. Het gaat alleen om een één- of tweeregelige woordverklaring. Zie bij de trefwoorden die al gedaan zijn om je een idee te geven wat wordt bedoeld. Enfin, veel plezier en succes! Groetjes, Paul -PaulD (overleg) 19 jan 2019 21:49 (CET)

Goed om te horen dat je je hier voor inzet. Ik zal even een oproep op Insta plaatsen. Noto Emoji v2.034 2744.svg Mike1023 Noto Emoji v2.034 2744.svg 20 jan 2019 13:37 (CET)
Leuk dat je hier mee bezig gaat! Ik wil graag bijdragen, maar ik doe nog even geen beloftes. Dollar symbol gold.svgVviktorie!! Overleg 20 jan 2019 22:07 (CET)

T-series is een rivaal van pewdiepie daar kenne de meeste mensen T-series van

Super Cassettes Industries Private Limited T-series-logo.svg Trading name T-Series Type Private Industry Entertainment Founded 11 July 1983; 35 years ago in Delhi, India[1] Founder Gulshan Kumar Headquarters Noida, India[2] Key people Bhushan Kumar (Chairman & Managing Director) Krishan Kumar Neeraj Kalyan[3] Services Music record label Film production Owner Bhushan Kumar (1983–97) Krishan Kumar (1997–present) YouTube information Channel T-Series Years active 2006–present Genre Music videos Film trailers Subscribers 81 million (18 January 2019) Total views 59.1 billion (18 January 2019) Play buttons Subscriber and view counts updated as of 14 January 2019. Website T-Series Super Cassettes Industries Private Limited, doing business as T-Series,[note 1][1][2] is an Indian music record label and film production company founded by Gulshan Kumar in 1983.[5] It is primarily known for Bollywood music soundtracks[5] and Indi-pop music.[6] As of 2014, T-Series is India's largest music record label, with up to 35% share of the Indian music market, followed by Sony Music India and Zee Music.[7]

Kumar, initially a fruit juice seller in Delhi, founded T-Series as a company to sell pirated Bollywood songs, before they eventually began producing new music. Their breakthrough came with the soundtrack for the 1988 Bollywood blockbuster Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak, composed by Anand-Milind, written by Majrooh Sultanpuri, and starring Aamir Khan and Juhi Chawla, which became one of the best-selling Indian music albums of the 1980s, with over 8 million sales. They eventually became a leading music label with the release of Aashiqui (1990), composed by Nadeem–Shravan, which sold 20 million copies and became the best-selling Indian soundtrack album of all time.[8] However, Gulshan Kumar was murdered by the Mumbai mafia syndicate D-Company in 1997. Since then, T-Series has been led by his son Bhushan Kumar and younger brother Krishan Kumar.

On YouTube, T-Series has a multi-channel network, with 29 channels that have more than 140 million subscribers as of January 2019[3] and 61.5 billion views as of August 2018.[9] The company's YouTube team consists of 13 people at the T-Series headquarters.[10] The company's main T-Series channel on YouTube primarily shows music videos as well as film trailers. In January 2017, it became the most-viewed YouTube channel, with over 59 billion views as of 18 January 2019.[11] With over 81 million subscribers as of 18 January 2019, it also ranks as the second most-subscribed channel behind PewDiePie.[12]


Contents 1 History 2 YouTube presence 3 Legal 4 List of artists 5 Production filmography 5.1 1990s 5.2 2000s 5.3 2010s 6 Soundtrack discography 6.1 Bollywood 6.2 Tamil 6.3 International 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External links History

Gulshan Kumar (1956‑1997), the founder of T-Series

Krishan Kumar (left) and CEO Bhushan Kumar (right), the brother and son of Gulshan Kumar, respectively, during the audio release of Aashiqui 2 (2013) T-Series was founded on July 11, 1983,[13] by Gulshan Kumar,[14] at the time an obscure fruit juice seller in the Daryaganj neighbourhood of Delhi.[15] The company initially sold pirated Bollywood songs, prior to releasing original music.[16]

Kumar discovered that there was a market for devotional music, and began recording and selling them. Kumar noticed that many elderly Hindu followers could not read the hymns and chants because of failing eyesight, so Kumar hired singers to record the chants and sold them as cheap cassettes. Later, he filmed major Hindu pilgrimages in India and sold them on VHS and video cassette tapes.[17]

T-Series' first original film soundtrack release was for Lallu Ram in 1984, with music scored by Ravindra Jain.[citation needed] The company's breakthrough came when it released the soundtrack for the 1988 Bollywood blockbuster Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak (also known as QSQT),[18] directed by Mansoor Khan and starring Aamir Khan and Juhi Chawla. The Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak soundtrack, composed by Anand-Milind and written by Majrooh Sultanpuri, became the best-selling Indian soundtrack album of 1988 and one of the best-selling Indian soundtrack albums of the 1980s,[19] with more than 8 million units sold.[20] The biggest hit song from the album was "Papa Kehte Hain", sung by Udit Narayan and picturised on Aamir Khan.[21][22] T-Series founder Gulshan Kumar soon played a key role in Bollywood's cassette boom of the late 1980s with his affordable T-Series albums.[23]

T-Series later became a leading music label with the release of Aashiqui (1990),[16] a film soundtrack album composed by duo Nadeem–Shravan, which sold 20 million units in India,[24] and is the best-selling Bollywood soundtrack album of all time.[8] A cover version of "Dheere Dheere" from Aashiqui was later sung by Yo Yo Honey Singh and released by T-Series in 2015.

T-Series was largely responsible for sparking a boom for the Indian music industry in the early 1990s.[25] Many of the best-selling Bollywood music albums of the 1990s, particularly those composed by Nadeem–Shravan, were released under the T-Series label.[8] Besides music production, the company also began venturing into film production.[26] The annual earnings of T-Series grew from ₹200 million ($16 million) in 1985 to ₹2 billion ($88 million) in 1991,[27][28] and by 1997 had reached ₹5 billion[29] ($140 million).[30]

In 1997, T-Series founder Gulshan Kumar was murdered by the Mumbai mafia syndicate D-Company.[29] His assassination also led to T-Series losing its most prolific musicians at the time, Nadeem–Shravan, due to Nadeem Akhtar Saifi initially being accused of involvement in the murder, before later being exonerated.[31][32][33] After Gulshan Kumar's death in 1997, the company has since been led by his son Bhushan Kumar,[34] with the help of Gulshan's younger brother Krishan Kumar.

As a film production company, the highest-grossing T-Series film production to date is the critically acclaimed sleeper hit Hindi Medium (2017), written by Zeenat Lakhani, directed by Saket Chaudhary, and starring Irrfan Khan and Saba Qamar.[35] It grossed ₹3.224 billion ($50 million) worldwide,[36] with $34 million in China alone,[37] becoming one of the top 20 highest-grossing Indian films of all time.[38] T-Series' and one of the most expensive Indian films will be Saaho,[39] a sci-fi thriller with a production budget of ₹3 billion (US$42 million), scheduled for release in 2019.[40][41] T-Series is also producing a biopic film based on the life of its founder Gulshan Kumar, called Mogul, which is currently under production and is scheduled for release in 2019.

YouTube presence

Further information: PewDiePie vs T-Series T-Series joined YouTube on 13 March 2006, but only started uploading videos in late 2010. Under this channel, T-Series primarily shows music videos and film trailers. By July 2013, it had crossed 1 billion views, becoming the second Indian YouTube channel to cross the milestone after Rajshri Productions.[42] In January 2017, T-Series surpassed PewDiePie to become the world's most-viewed YouTube channel,[43][11][44][45] and as of 19 December 2018 it has 56 billion views.[12] The T-Series YouTube channel is run by a team of 13 people at the T-Series headquarters.[10]

The YouTube channel has reached 75 million subscribers, making it the second most-subscribed YouTube channel after PewDiePie. Currently, it is the most subscribed Asian and non-English-language YouTube channel. Reaching 50 million subscribers, the channel received a Custom Play Button on September 10, 2018.[46] It is also the second channel ever to hit 70 million subscribers.[12] Beyond this, the channel earns an average of nearly 150,000 subscribers a day.[47][48]

T-Series channel also owns a multi-channel network, with 29 channels,[3] which include YouTube channels such as T-Series Tamil, T-Series Telugu,[9] and Bollywood Classics.[49] On top of this, six of their channels are among the top 100 most-subscribed channels in India, including T-Series, Bhakti Sagar, Apna Punjab, T-Series Regional, Lahari Music, and T-Series Telugu.[50] T-Series' 29 channels have accumulated a total of more than 100 million YouTube subscribers as of November 2018,[3] and 61.5 billion views as of August 2018.[9] During January–July 2018, T-Series earned an income of ₹7.2 billion (US$100 million) from YouTube.[9] The most popular T-Series artist on YouTube is Guru Randhawa, whose 2017 song "Lahore" has crossed 700 million views on YouTube.[51]

The growth of T-Series' YouTube channel has been attributed to India's emerging online population. India currently has 500 million Internet users and this number is expected to grow rapidly.[52] A major breakthrough in India's Internet growth came in September 2016 with India's first 4G network, Reliance Jio, offering data at very low costs.[14] India has since emerged as the world's second-largest online population (behind China, where YouTube is blocked), with YouTube alone having over 225 million monthly Indian users. India's high demand for YouTube content and the lack of local content creators has contributed significantly to the rapid growth of T-Series.[53]

The growth of T-Series is also attributed to its growing audience outside of India.[14] About 40% of the channel's traffic comes from outside of India,[3] including 12% from the United States.[14] The majority of the channel's overseas viewers belong to the global South Asian diaspora. More recently, the channel's overseas viewership has increased further, as a result of attention and controversy drawn to the channel by foreign YouTubers such as PewDiePie and MrBeast.[3] YouTubers such as MrBeast and Justin Roberts made videos which were in support of PewDiePie[54][55][56] to keep him as the most-subscribed channel on YouTube.[57]

Legal In November 2007, T-Series filed a lawsuit against YouTube for infringing on the copyright of its music by allowing users to upload videos of its music onto YouTube, which could be accessed for free and obtained an interim order against YouTube from the Delhi High Court, which restrained YouTube from infringing on its copyright.[58][59] T-Series and YouTube settled out of court in January 2011.[59]

Afkomstig van Wikikids , de interactieve Nederlandstalige Internet-encyclopedie voor en door kinderen. "https://wikikids.nl/index.php?title=Wikikids:Boomhut&oldid=542638"