• Metaright@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    YouTube might be the biggest challenge yet given the extraordinary amount of storage needed to recreate it.

    • simple@lemmy.mywire.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Its also getting the content creators onto the new platform. Thats a bigger challenge I think, without creators it’s a dead site really, and making videos is significantly more difficult than image or text posting.

      For storage, if we assume the format would be WebM at 1080p, 60fps and 20 minutes in length, it turns out to about 1GB. Even a cheap VPS instance usually offer 50GB of storage (with not too expensive storage upgrades).

      So if its distributed evenly, we can host a good bit of videos (nothing compared to YouTube though).

      • randomguy2323@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Its nearly impossible to replicate what YouTube it is today. The amount of storage and bandwith require is immense, also the creators coming up to a new platform without a way to get money it will really hard to have something like YouTube.

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          Its nearly impossible to replicate what YouTube it is today.

          Why would we want to? People want to replace Youtube because Youtube sucks ass. Replacing it with another monetized platform will only ever lead to the same place Youtube is at now.

          It sucks that people who managed to make a living from their hobby have gotten fucked over, but until we have some major regulatory and economic overhauls, that’s just how it works. Changing platforms is not a solution to that.

          • Rakn@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 year ago

            Because what’s the point otherwise. Let’s just make a YouTube without videos. That will surely work.

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        1 year ago

        Let’s not forget that there’s money to be earned by being a youtube person. Creating a model that would make this possible in a federated approach would be bonkers as hell and probably just invite predatory dipshits who then lure creators with seemingly good offers and then start to hold them hostage in ways YouTube hasn’t dared so far.

        • Gatsby@lemm.ee
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          lure creators with seemingly good offers and then start to hold them hostage in ways YouTube hasn’t dared so far.

          Like Smosh?

          Young up and coomers, first giants on YouTube. Sold their channel and brand for stock. Then were tied to the company for years who worked them like dogs. Until the company that bought them went bankrupt so their stock was nullified and they in the end sold their company for $0.

          I wouldn’t say YouTube was free from it

        • Kichae@kbin.social
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          Most professional YouTubers survive primarily off of Patreon support and sponsored videos. YouTube ads provide only a small fraction of what they earn. If they could increase their Patreon or sponsorship income by cross-posting to PeerTube, then they could be enticed to do so. The current issue there is that sponsors are going to want accurate analytics, and PeerTube isn’t going to be able to offer the kind of depth of audience analysis that YouTube can.

          The problem is, the cost of hosting videos – both in terms of storage and in terms of bandwidth – is kind of prohibitive. That part needs to be solved.

          • Neve8028@lemm.ee
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            The reality is that most content creators will not switch platforms because it guarantees a significant loss of viewership. Ad reads won’t pay much if you’re only talking to a fraction of your audience.

          • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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            While I agree in spirit, what other option is there in a capitalist society? Paying a subscription fee for every single service or every single content creator? Not sure people are going to go for that en masse.

      • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        So if its distributed evenly, we can host a good bit of videos (nothing compared to YouTube though).

        I read 500 hours of content are uploaded to YouTube every minute. Obviously a lot of that is low quality, but we’re still talking a lot of content unless we’re suggesting the creators host it themselves (which could work for a small subset of folks if it were enough of a turnkey solution).

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        1 year ago

        60fps

        Correct me if I’m wrong but I would guess that the majority of YouTube videos are at 30fps, right? I only want 60fps for gaming/sports clips

      • Ilovethebomb@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Convincing content creators to upload their videos to multiple platforms will be easy, as will uploading their old work

        You just end up with a chicken and egg situation with viewers and creators.

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      Yeah I think most people thinking we can just replace YouTube do not understand the scale of their operation. What YouTube does is many many orders of magnitude bigger and more complex than anything happening on the fediverse. PeerTube is a joke by comparison. There is a reason that even when VC money was flowing like crazy, nobody was able to even think about launching a competitor.

      On top of that, no platform can seek to replace YouTube without offering the same or better creator compensation. Free services will never meet that.

    • dreikelvin@lemmy.world
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      Someone needs to invent middle-out compression and install it on a network of smart fridges

    • Metallibus@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, this is the one I don’t see happening.

      Look at Twitch. Microsoft, Facebook, and (somewhat) Google have attempted to dethrone them and they’ve all failed. Things like Rumble and Kick are still going, and Kick may have a slight chance.

      But that’s a much smaller platform, that everyone agrees is absolute garbage and trying to kill itself at every turn. YouTube would be a much bigger challenge.

    • HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I’m not sure what it takes but TILVids doesn’t seem to have a problem loading videos…

      You might not get 4k but is that really important?

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        1 year ago

        TILVids has orders of magnitude less usage than YouTube, both in terms of storage and bandwidth.

        Generally speaking you can expect to hit one bottleneck or another whenever you grow one order of magnitude, and fixing these becomes harder each time.

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          TILVids has orders of magnitude less usage than YouTube, both in terms of storage and bandwidth.

          You’re not wrong but again, does that really matter? I can watch videos and they look just as good to my eye as they do on YT.

          • Rakn@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 year ago

            That depends on what you want. Folks where talking about a YouTube replacement. If TILVids is that for you right now and you don’t expect more content there then it’s all good.

      • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        Torrents are peer to peer. The storage comes exclusively from seeders. If nobody is seeding a torrent, and nobody has the data, it is dead and the data no longer exists.

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    I literally have like 1TB of video stored on YouTube and privatized. Google is making $0 from my videos, but they still have to store them and have them available if I want to watch it (it’s all of my Twitch VODs). Meanwhile websites like Streamable perma-delete my 5MB video after it gets 0 views in 2 milliseconds.

    YouTube is a behemoth that will not be replaced.

    • Andrzej@kbin.social
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      I mean you’re right that YouTube isn’t going anywhere, but they’re going to either delete that data or start charging you for it at some point

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      I wouldn’t count on that and I’d definitely recommend backups. I had a channel full of videos just disappear and I never found out what happened. I just went to check something one day and it was gone. The videos are all gone. Nobody could help I eventually just had to suck it up. From what I read at the time it happens here and there but not to people big enough for there to ever be a stink about it. Someone said it happens if you don’t log on for long enough but I logged in every few months at least for various reasons so I dunno.

    • Cybersteel@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Yep I have a scheduled task that uploads terabytes worth of empty/noise videos up on to YouTube to take up their hosting space as a final hurrah/middle finger to those corporate fat cats/silicon valley pundits.

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      1 year ago

      Someone mentioned youtube was sending notices to people with private videos, about removing them or making public

  • ThePac@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    lol reddit is still kicking, people. Don’t count your chickens yet.

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        1 year ago

        All while the fediverse still has low numbers.

        I like the concept, but if your only selling point is “it’s like email, you can use any instance” it’s not going to be popular to most people.

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      Moreover, killing Youtube will be harder than killing any of these social media. Serving video content is very expensive.

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          1 year ago

          It could work if everyone that used it was interested in decentralizing it, but that seems impossible from my perspective

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        I’m not disagreeing but it’s still kicking. My friend who is on reddit said it was weird for a couple days during the blackout but it’s back to normal now. He also wondered why I didn’t use the official app. Like it or not, most people are like him.

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          I can’t believe this. The official app is so bad, I am losing faith in humanity.

          Even if you get rid of the ads (ReVanced manager is your friend) it still pushes weird content into your timeline. Like, you scroll and there is an interesting post that you want to comment on. Oops, posted 20 days ago. Why would you recommend that to me!?

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            Yeah he mentioned things like that were happening during the blackout but he said it’s mostly back to normal for him now. He also watches TV and movies with all sorts of ads. For me, that’s an instant pivot to find something else to do. My dad has repeatedly asked me if I want some product he sees in an Instagram ad. I eventually had to tell him to specifically never get me a product he sees in an ad. People on the fediverse aren’t normal. We care a lot about things most people don’t really mind.

        • WhatASave@lemmy.world
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          mostly the same. I feel like even niche places get some of the annoying reddit mentality that has annoyed me for quite a while. There’s still the hivemind and circle jerky stuff in small places. It’s felt like less of that here, but also only a fraction of the people are on Lemmy so that will change when more people come.

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      I remember Voat and numerous other attempts to abandon Reddit.

      I really hope that this one sticks but it needs to be very robust (in terms of moderation, server capacity, user friendliness etc) if it is going to handle a large influx of users without breaking down.

    • 👽🍻👽@lemmy.world
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      Still kicking but…somehow not the same. It’s something I can’t quite explain. There’s just something different about it now. I had to look something up on Reddit a couple of days ago. It was the first time I’d been back since they killed all the third party apps. It reminded me of going back to a city I used to live but my friends were all gone and my favorite places to go had changed. So, while it was the same place, and there were plenty of people around, it seemed exhausted and forced.

    • nodrod@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Agreed. Friends in my discord group still bring up reddit posts daily, usually in subs with games and memes.

      • JohnBoBon@lemmy.world
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        Yeah, I think that’s because reddit just has the hugest communities for individual games and niche interests. There are some lemmy communities for some of the games I follow but there are like seven users in each of them. Lemmy is getting really good for broader topics like “games” or “technology” but isn’t quite there yet for more narrow interests like “Dolphin emulator” for example.

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    Yeah, no. The deaths of those websites have not happened yet, and when they do, the Fediverse will not be the one holding the scythe

    • void_wanderer@lemmy.world
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      Yeah, FB was killed by the younger people abandoning it for other SM. Twitter was killed by Musk. Reddit was killed by Spez.

      And by “killed”, I mean “lost some users and content quality”. They still have millions of active users.

      And my personal feed on Reddit is pretty much unchanged. Very few niche subreddits went into an extended blackout, so I still got all my content. And since I use the mobile website (FF+uBlock), the API change didn’t affect me that much. But I hope more communities from Reddit will move over here, especially the non-tech ones.

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      Right, it’ll be death by suicides.

      Google should probably be on there too. Can’t find anything either non-corporate or irrelevant these days.

      I was looking for js libraries that extended the ecma array prototypes, Google gave me a billion pages about how to use the ecma array prototypes.

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    I frankly don’t see a way for federated video to happen unless uploads are severely limited or it’s paywalled. Even with YouTube’s wild compression, you’re looking at several gigs for a single 4k video.

    Honestly the fact that YouTube exists is a miracle. Video is still just monstrously large.

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      I hadn’t dealt with video in years (like 2008) and recently used my Canon R6 to record a few seconds of 4k footage.

      After getting over being annoyed at the camera stopping due to overheating after just 5 minutes, I was shocked to see a 7 second clip come to almost 700mb as a raw file.

      Indeed video will probably be the last kind of network to see federation. It could take some pretty generous acts of philanthropy along the way to make anything sustainable happen.

      • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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        Yeah I did a music video in 4k on an A7s2 and the source files, for what ended up as a 4 minute video, were around 100GB.

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          100 GB ? that’s cute. I work in a film production company for advertisements, where the recent trend has been for the crew to return after 3-5 days of shooting, with RAIDs filled with somewhere between 15 and 25 TB of raw data. no fun to store all this.

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        I mean, that’s an extreme example. That’s way above what on even a 4K BR disc.

        I think Netflix is like 6GB for a two hour movie 1080p which is more manageable, but my connection (at a whopping 6Mbps upload) would just about be able to host that for one other person to see.

        Modern connections can do a lot, but it would have to be a large peer to peer solution to be back in the hands of the masses. A couple of Linux nerds with a spare server under their desk isn’t going to cut it. Realistically, popular videos would have to be on a CDN of some sort, and that ain’t particularly cheap at scale.

        Freedom isn’t free, as the song goes.

        • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          I’d happily pay for a federated video service tbh. I already pay for YouTube. I didn’t even blink when they raised the price on me because I get so much value out of it

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      It’s simple: don’t do 4K. It’s absolutely unneeded.

      I’ve never seen any big media content that actually benefits from more than 720p. Among other things, for watching comfortably on laptops. Heck, for most communication / reaction videos, 540p / 480p is more than enough (in those cases the audio is actually more important than the visuals).

      • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I watch a lot of music videos though so I love 4k. Don’t know why you’re getting down voted though. What you said is true. I don’t need to watch a talk stream vod in 4k

        • Venia Silente@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Thanks. And it’s understandable, I’m guessing most of the people downvoting are the ones who are trying to defend their sunk cost after having bought into a solution without a problem.

          That said, there do are valid use cases for stuff like 1080p or 4K (or for, say, >= 120 fps). I just don’t think modern “big corp” media, or TV shows, are good examples of it. Like, honestly, what do you want to watch Avengers: Endgame in 4K for? To salivate at the warts on The Hulk’s groin?

          • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            You’re right on that too. Those movies actually look worse in 4k because low resolutions hide the bad CGI.

            I have a large collection of 4k blurays for my favorite movies though. Like Blade Runner 2049 and Dune look fantastic. But not every movie deserves the hard disk space.

        • Shapillon@lemmy.world
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          And still, do you need a 4K video stream for a music video?

          I understand wanting higher res audio (which still amounts to minuscule amounts of bandwith compared to the video stream) but I don’t get how image quality is important in this setting.

              • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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                Not on my TV. The 1080p on YouTube also loses a lot of color data which is pretty noticeable on OLED. On my phone though yeah even 720p is fine.

                • Shapillon@lemmy.world
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                  Yeah maybe I’m not very competent on that with my 7yo cheap phone and 1080p LCD screen (free from someone who wanted to trash it) ^^’

      • panCat@lemmy.world
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        Cannot agree more with this , most screens those are used at homes are good to go with 720p , or at least i fail to see a difference !

      • Tvkan@feddit.de
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        I’ve never seen any big media content that actually benefits from more than 720p.

        Have you considered seeing an optometrist instead?

    • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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      I wonder when they’ll have to start deleting content to make space again. At some point, adding more and more servers probably won’t be feasible anymore.

      It really is just wild that a service like YouTube is as big as it is and just does its thing.

      • Shapillon@lemmy.world
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        Currently data storage is dirt cheap because globalised mass production of electronics is a wild thing.

        As soon as we get past our current peak everything production at least on copper, rare metals, and petrol (there’s more, I’m just not knowledgeable enough) and we start to have to ration things a bit high res video streaming will be one of the first things to go.

        • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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          And then comes the question, what will they delete first?

          Probably old and therefore maybe irrelevant content, but those old videos from over a decade ago are also mostly lower resolution and bitrate and won’t free up as much space.

          So once that’s exhausted, what goes next?

          Who will have the privilege to stay on the platform, and who won’t? Or in other words, who makes YouTube the most money?

          And once that has to be decided, content will be whatever YouTube wants it to be. Which I can’t imagine being a good thing.

          • Shapillon@lemmy.world
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            My guess would be deleting higher res versions of less watched videos and unwatched videos alltogether.

            Anyway archiving everything everyone does is - imho - a fool’s errand.

    • GTG3000@programming.dev
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      Well, time to switch to watching Nebula?

      I can’t see how it will work for small-time creators though. Or for people who just want to show a video online.

      • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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        I love nebula too. They’re definitely what I imagine federated video would be though. Restricted uploads, and paid. Nothing wrong with that though, video is expensive.

        • GTG3000@programming.dev
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          Well, one question is how it’d be paid for. You can’t really have a federated payment provider, can you?

          So would you have to pay for each separate server somehow, gathering them up like streaming service subscriptions?

          • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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            Someone smarter than me will need to figure that out. I’m a lowly software engineer, not a computer scientist.

            • GTG3000@programming.dev
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              Hey, doesn’t mean you can’t aspire to be a systems architect :D

              You know, make enough decisions that weren’t perfect in the long term and you’ll learn something! …totally not speaking from experience, no.

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            You can’t really have a federated payment provider, can you?

            Not to sound like a crypto bro, but this is literally the biggest benefit of cryptocurrencies, easy transfer of money between people wallet to wallet, and you can choose your exchange to exchange the money between crypto and cash.

            Unfortunately crypto bros absolutely ruined crypto for everything it could’ve been

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        thats what I thought too - until I actually signed up for Nebula. It took me a week to exhaust every creator I wanted to watch.

        No regrets because I do enjoy the content, but their catalogue is absolutely tiny compare to youtube.

    • Stan@lemmywinks.com
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      Is size really the issue though? I can torrent more than I can store on my hard drives.

      Seems like you could build a video streaming service on that. (Actually I think some people already did this.)

      • Onurb@lemmy.world
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        Well that’s exactly what peertube does to distribute the load of serving the videos

      • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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        Yeah it is an issue. I archive my 4k blurays and they chew through my hard drive space far faster than I can get new hard drives

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        Lbry does exactly this. Actually it works way better than the last time I checked it out. I’m guessing they have invested in a centralized storage solution because I’m encountering basically no missing videos and extremely fast playback which wasn’t the case the last time I checked them out a few years ago

    • Mayoman68@lemmy.world
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      I was actually thinking about what it would take to have a truly peer to peer video site. Have clients simultaneously consume, serve and transcode content. It would obviously be concentrated in the hands of big enthusiasts and small video companies, but presumably it would be similar to the fediverse where you can choose from many instances.

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        problem, the way I see it, is that there are wayyyyy more devices that cannot transcode and do not have the storage to maintain a cache, than ones that do. And the ones that can do so for a large number of clients are expensive to run. Much more expensive than stuff like lemmy. It’d be hard to form that kind of ecosystem.

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    1 year ago

    I think you can replace all social media with a decentralized version, except YouTube. Reason is cost and monetization.

    • berrodeguarana@lemmy.eco.br
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      I agree. I think it’s just good that with all this shitstorm, a lot of the good users migrated to the Lemmy.

      We don’t need 100% of the Reddit population here, if we just get like 10-20% we will have potential to become the long gone golden age of Reddit.

      • Fried_out_Kombi@lemmy.world
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        Exactly. The users who have moved here are disproportionately commenters, power posters, and moderators from reddit. I was a top 1% poster on reddit, lots of OC, but I’ve essentially stopped participating there. I occasionally comment, but I don’t make posts on reddit anymore. If a significant fraction of power posters (and not just the reposters) and moderators migrate to lemmy, lemmy will have disproportionately good content, while the reddit experience will degrade further into reposts and poor moderation. I think lemmy already has disproportionately good posts and engagement, just still pretty small at the moment.

      • phil@cryptodon.lol
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        1 year ago

        people often forget that reddit initially achieved network effect because a small number of high quality users left digg for being too captured by corporate interests. the rest took 10 years to play out, but inevitably when the mainstream follows these initial users, the platform dies and it is time for another migration. I think we’ve been ready for a while.

      • panCat@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The shitshow reddit has become now , I believe most will be looking for an alternative !

    • itsJoelle@lemmy.world
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      Yeah, I kinda agree. I like the niche, albiet small, community these decentralized platforms offer. TBH, I love the trade of brands not pointing their content firehoses in our direction. While I love the idea of more people using lemmy, for example, I worry about the inflection pointe where that changes and this place gets ruined.

    • ritchie@lemmy.one
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      Facebook is nowhere dead. Everyone I meet wants to chat via Messenger, small firms here don’t bother creating a website anymore, they create a facebook page (’ cause everyone’s there) and local/company communities use facebook groups to talk. Not to mention event hosts, they create fb events. If you are interested in topics that are liked globally, the fediverse is getting better. But if you are looking for a local community, you’ll rarely find any. The lemmy page of my country is basically dead, the sub however is thriving.

  • R0cket_M00se@lemmy.world
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    None of these websites are dead, and youtube isn’t going anywhere. You can’t just host Zetabytes of video data on a home server.

    • dm_me_your_feet@lemmy.world
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      Exactly. Youtube is there to stay, i think. I dont have many issues with it as well tbh. I pay for our family account and its just an amazing experience, no need for Spotify with YT Music as well. Creators earn more with premium too - the service is just working for me.

      One could debate about hosting costs and revenue split and content policies, but in principle, i have no qualms with Youtube.

      • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        YouTube probably isn’t worried about open source competition, but Twitch could be a real competitor. Twitch already captured a large chunk of gaming, especially the live streams.

        • verysoft@kbin.social
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          Twitch could have massively ate into YouTube if they wanted, but they must have decided it wasn’t worth the cost to host videos.

          • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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            Twitch would need a lot of work to make videos more first class citizens, that is probably more the reason than storage costs. They have Amazon backing them now with basically unlimited storage potential.

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        1 year ago

        Honestly the only subscription I don’t mind paying for. You can’t beat ad free YouTube videos.

          • EliasChao@lemmy.one
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            You can also seamlessly download videos on all of your devices, on top of their own music streaming service.

            I’m sure you can get all of it for free somehow, but there’s a point in life that convenience is more important. Also, the family plan is dirt cheap if you consider all you get.

      • Quentinp@lemmy.ca
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        Yeah paid YT is probably the last media subscription to go, especially with YT Music. Hours and hours of watch time probably number one thing watched by the whole family. The only problem I usually have with YT is getting “boxed in” to content, like it thinks I only like watching channel X now because I watched a video. Sometimes the entire feed is like 2 or 3 channels and it’s harder to discover something new.

        (One interesting thing, if you create your own YT channels each channel has a fresh watch history and sometimes you can then build up a different set of videos on the other channels)

    • Stormy404@kbin.social
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      1 year ago
      1. patreon
      2. most people make literal pennies off of youtube, so it wouldn’t be much for them to switch
    • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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      There is money to be made, just not off ads. Instagram has content without paying people. It just depends on how the creator is financing themselves. Paid sponsorships? Is it in support of something else (Patreon, web store, etc)? There is no money to be made off ads and I support that. But there is money to be made, but you need a following for it to be worthwhile. It’d be interesting if someone created an app that allows dual posting to YouTube and PeerTube, or posting to PixelFed & Instagram at the same time. Once they start getting followers on those other platforms, there are less intrusive methods to monetize it.

    • JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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      Yeah, till we have paid subscriptions or very well targeted good reputation advertising, there won’t be enough money to switch over.

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    1 year ago

    Mastadon, Searx, Fediverse, and so on aren’t killing or replacing the sites they’re modeled after, not even close. They’re just providing a privacy focused alternative for those who don’t want to whored out by corporations or abused by powermods or shitty business decisions

    • itsJoelle@lemmy.world
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      This response isn’t meant to be argumentative, I’m just learning:

      Isn’t the fredieverse have the issue of being not very private at all? Aren’t our up votes public? Is our viewing history freely available to those that maintain an instance?

      • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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        They’re private in the sense that there isn’t a corporation stealing your data without your knowledge, selling it without your consent, whoring you out for ads against your will, and/or making your experience shittier to manipulate you into buying their paid features. These alternatives offer a much more pure experience for the typical user. Things like comment and vote history being public is just a part of the design of the forum, they’re not tools to farm your data.

        • MrScottyTay@sh.itjust.works
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          A corporation can still be “stealing” your data without your knowledge if info is public, it’s called Scraping

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          1 year ago

          Is that true though? Any given instance could be running their own data collection.

          • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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            They could, but they’re pretty much guaranteed to not be as bad as the big corporations because they lack the resources and know how. The fact that you could also host your own instance is a huge plus considering that you could basically ensure that your data won’t get collected.

            • Kichae@kbin.social
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              Even if you’re self-hosting, you still have to send your data to any instance hosting posts or comments you’re interacting with, otherwise you’ll be the only person to ever see your own posts and comments.

              No other instance will be guaranteed to have a complete profile of you, though.

        • itsJoelle@lemmy.world
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          Things like comment and vote history being public is just a part of the design of the forum,

          Or, to check my understanding, make the structure of the Frediverse actually work, right?

          • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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            Lemmy is basically just a decentralized clone of reddit. A public profile containing comments, posts, upvotes, and the like are considered an integral part of the Reddit experience. I personally don’t like it as a feature, but that’s why it exists.

    • panCat@lemmy.world
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      No one said they are killing or replacing them , I moved to fediverse becuase the govt cant bully them into censoring certain content that was being removed from major SMs in my country

      • Ignacio@lemmy.world
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        No one said

        The post portrays the grim reaper killing them and is titled “the decentralized web is growing”

  • bricks@lemmy.world
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    Super shilly comment incoming, but YouTube Premium is maybe the only subscription I pay for (other than Game Pass) that I think is worthwhile. I was also blown away by how much I like YouTube Music. Don’t get me wrong, I’m fully anticipating the platform to race to the bottom and go to complete and utter shit, but for the time being, I think it’s solid.

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      You can also not pay for it and get it with ReVanced.

      ReVanced also auto skips ad reads in the video itself

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      1 year ago

      RIP Play Music.

      But yeah, Drive and YT bundles are basically the one thing I’ll still pay for, and it ends up including YT Music which isn’t bad.

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      I have to agree with this one. I got premium way back in 2015 when it first came out as youtube red, my reasoning at the time was since it came with Play Music, no ads on youtube videos, and at the time cost the same as a spotify subscription, I could have the same music library I was already paying for PLUS youtube without ads every 10 seconds and access to youtube red exclusive content, Mindfield by Vsauce and the Rooster Teeth movies at the time, I was getting more for the same 10 bucks. I was sad to see play music go but youtube music letting me add songs to my playlists from videos on youtube if the song itself isn’t directly in the streaming service is pretty cool and I’ve been grandfathered into the same price, so I still pay the same $10/mo now that I did 8 years ago. Only subscription I’ll ever actually tell anyone is worth getting over just using an adblocker instead.

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    Video is literally the data elephant in the room. I think we’ll need AI to assist in developing something that demanding in terms of bandwidth. Remember, Youtube just works. No one is going to move to a platform where a video takes 30-60 seconds to load a video and a half an hour to upload a video when a practically instant option exists.

    And I may be in the minority here, but so far, Google has been the least nefarious tech giant to my eyes. They haven’t given me adequate reason to disavow them. I’m not saying they’re good, I’m just saying they’re not Musk Twitter, Zuck Meta, or the like. They don’t obfuscate the fact that they sell your data like Meta, and they even understand the value of open source software, rare for a publically traded capitalist corporation. This will probably change, greed rot is universal, and they do treat their creators like dogshit on YouTube. But I’d be shocked if it was reasonably replacable by distributed enthusiasts given current infrastructure and bandwidth pricing. Bigger fish.

    • nickavem@lemm.ee
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      Really? I’d say Apple is the least nefarious. They sell products to customers, they do not sell customers’ attention.

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        Depends what you value I guess, Apple has set so many terrible precedents for closed systems and walled-gardens.

        • Debo@lemmy.world
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          You’re not wrong, but those same walled gardens keep corporations OUT as much as they keep you IN.

          If you like your gardener, no big deal. But if you want azaleas and the gardener prefers daisies, ur out of luck.

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      Least nefarious ≠ good. Alphabet is still a publicly traded corporation at heart, and they have a legal obligation to their shareholders to turn a profit by any means necessary.

      Don’t forget that they got rid of their “Don’t be Evil” motto.

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        It’s weird that Evil Corporation whose critique is still valid is just not as shitty or simply flies under radar by modern standards. YouTube’s pipeline into conspiracies and demonitization are likely the last I’ve heard of them in negative light, and that’s just a tip of an iceberg. That’s like you can be evil without being cringe.

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      300 Petabytes is nothing. The Filecoin network alone has 20 EiB available. There must be more data than that on Youtube

      Edit: Maybe there isn’t, but that would render the problem very easy

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        As far as I can tell Filecoin works by having clients pay to store files on people’s servers so there’s still a question of who is going to pay for it.

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          Users could have to pay 0.005$ for each 20min video each year. I don’t think that’s a problem