The company said new video matching technology would alert selected
content creators if their videos were reposted to Facebook without
permission.
In August, YouTube star Hank Green wrote a blog criticising the company over its slow response to video piracy.
Brady Haran, who runs a collection of YouTube channels, told the BBC he still had questions over Facebook's new approach.
But the company has been criticised by prominent video creators such as Mr Green for failing to tackle video piracy.
In
June, research by advertising agency Ogilvy found that 73% of the most
popular videos on Facebook had been ripped from other websites.
Announcing
its new approach, Facebook said: "Our matching tool will evaluate
millions of video uploads quickly and accurately, and when matches are
surfaced, publishers will be able to report them to us for removal."
The new tool will be available to a "small group of partners" while the company improves the technology.
As
well as detecting freebooted videos, the BBC understands the tool will
be able to detect when small portions of stolen content are used in
another video without permission.
However, unlike YouTube's
content ID system which can block infringing videos automatically,
Facebook's system will notify copyright holders and ask them if they
want to remove the freebooted video.
'Frustrating'
"It's a daily frustration to see wealthy companies exploit your work
without permission," said Brady Haran, whose educational YouTube
channels are followed by around two million people.
Mr Haran is credited with coining the term freebooting in the Hello Internet podcast he co-hosts.
He
told the BBC: "The first few hours of a video upload is the golden
window when it gets the most views. Any solution requiring notifications
and human intervention risks 'closing the gate after horse has bolted'.
"Facebook must be aware of this and I'm curious about whether they plan to address it."
Facebook said it planned to develop a "comprehensive video management system" and was "committed" to tackling video piracy.
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