YouTube Gaming launched approximately 18 hours ago. 13 hours ago, the first gamer was already hitting Twitter with his rant, accusing the service of wrongfully taking down two live stream recordings.

As we all know and love to hate, YouTube has one of the quickest copyright takedown systems on the Web.

Due in part to legal agreements it has with various content providers, the company moves pretty fast when a request is filled.

This is generally a good thing if you're the one that found one of his videos on someone else's channel.

But since most of these takedowns are carried out by an automated system that looks for audio & video similarities between uploaded content, sometimes this produces lots of false positives thanks in large part to background sound.

The most obvious case happens when you record and upload a video while leaving the radio open in your room, playing one of Lady Gaga's songs.

YouTube's system will detect the audio similarities and take down your video, even if you had no intention of breaking any laws.

This is exactly what happened to @JackFrags, a professional gamer which was happily (we presume) recording his Gears of Wars Ultimate Edition gameplay through YouTube's recently launched Gaming platform.

The problem is that the game's background music is copyrighted, and when YouTube's automated system detected this, it flagged JackFrags' videos, blocking monetization, and even access to them from some parts of the world.

For someone making a living out of game reviews on the Web, we appreciate JackFrags for not using expletives in a situation which actually deserved some.

If YouTube ever hopes to beat out Twitch, situations like these should be rare and far between.

Had 2 content ID's on In game music from my Gears stream on Youtube. No monetisation and blocked in certain countries pic.twitter.com/fVs98InqhS — JackFrags (@jackfrags) August 26, 2015

Makes it very hard to stream games on Youtube if each time I do a walkthrough I get content ID's, can't monetise and blocked to some viewers — JackFrags (@jackfrags) August 26, 2015

Why is gaming music being flagged on a gaming platform that wants creators to make content for it. It should be a separate database surely? — JackFrags (@jackfrags) August 26, 2015

OK. So @YouTubeGaming sucks right now. Trying to watch @PeanutButterGmr's stream and it starts me at the very beginning of the stream — Lookin for Cobis dad (@SwAg_MaStEr_MLG) August 27, 2015

Either my internet just sucks or @YouTubeGaming buffers every few secs at 720p — Dave (@Codec_Gaming) August 27, 2015

The #1 reason why the YouTube Gaming live streaming service sucks: "Live streaming is not available in your country due to rights issues". — Sherry (@Sherry_DC) August 26, 2015

First stream I look into: "Live Streaming is not available in your country due to rights issues" #youtubegaming #sucks — Wicked Sencho (@WickedSencho) August 26, 2015

So now you know why YouTube's Content ID system sucks and why YouTube Gaming will probably fail hard. — DaBeardedXeno (@DaBeardedXeno) August 26, 2015

We could have added hundreds of other tweets, but this page would have taken to much to load.