That's the problem, though. Abridging counts as fair use, since it is considered a parody. The whole reason this is even a problem is because bots don't care about law and YouTube doesn't care about content creators. They get a DMCA, they just follow it by default, I don't think there's even a single human involved in the process, and the appeals process is labyrinthine and restrictive, allowing you the space of, like, two tweets to make your case. This is one of those cases where bots do more harm than good and YouTube's staunch "fuck the users" policy are, eventually, going to shoot it right in the brain pan.