• Nobody@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    These tech companies have underestimated their utility. They are mostly providing mindless time wasters. If you try to charge money or create inconvenience, people will look for something else to do.

    Their attention is your lifeblood, and you’re actively giving them reasons to look elsewhere. The VC grow-at-all-costs business model is fundamentally flawed. It doesn’t scale when profitability becomes a priority.

    • Supervisor194@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Their attention is your lifeblood, and you’re actively giving them reasons to look elsewhere.

      👍

      My attention is all the currency YouTube will ever get from me - and it should be enough. If I post videos to YouTube (for nothing in return) and I talk to people about videos I saw on YouTube or link them to videos - then I am a net gain for Google and they should treat me as such. If anything, they should be working (nicely) to try to get me to want to pay (or view ads) and just be thankful I’m there if I don’t pay (or view ads). Instead they’ve chosen to work at ensuring everyone is so goddamn pissed off at their bullshit that they’d rather make it their full-time job to never give them another dime. Good job, Google! Smart!

      Edit: Oh look, half a dozen lectures about how Google has to make money somehow. Hi there YouTube shills, I thought I would see you here.

      • Obinice@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Look I hate YouTube ads too, and ads in general, but let’s say every user of a service is like you. Attention is all the currency they’ll ever get from you, that’s totally cool, absolutely. I’m totally that way too. But they’ve got to make money somehow, so if you’re not the paying customer, someone else has to be.

        I’m not saying it has to be ad sales either, but if we want a world in which we can use services for free without ads, we need to come up with an alternative way for them to make money. It has to come from somewhere, and by the bucketload.

        If every user thinks like you, then it doesn’t matter how many people you talk to or share links with, you’re not a net gain on their service, you bring nothing to it.

        Why should they, or anybody, be thankful that you honour them with your presence, if you contribute nothing of value? What makes you so entitled to use somebody’s product for free with no strings attached?

        Ads suck, I’m eager for us to move past them once we figure out an alternative that keeps products in business and us receiving things for free. But we can’t deny the reality we live in right now either. Even huge companies like Google (who yes, do suck) have to make money to survive.

        • daltotron@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I think generally you will find that people of this opinion hold that it is unreasonable that we have privatized basically all of the internet infrastructure. These people tend to be in favor of expecting the consumer spends more on hardware for hosting, and enthusiasts, hobbyists, non-profits, and occasionally companies develop the software necessary to make the internet function, rather than companies just paying for tons and tons of warehouses of servers, and then just forcing the software to all become fucked up walled gardens while the actual utilities everyone rests upon is left to rot.

        • jasep@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          they’ve got to make money somehow

          But they have been, and for years. All the years I’ve run a smartphone Google has harvested and profited from my data. From Gmail to Chrome (before I switched) to Maps, etc - they have profited from people’s data at scale. So the argument that they need to make money somehow falls flat for me.

          Also, if they charged like $2 a year to block ads, plenty of people would buy it. But like most things lately, the enshitification of our user experience continues. It’s not enough for companies like Google to “make money” - it’s never enough and their greed has no boundaries.

          That’s why you see people like us pushing back - enough is enough.

          • arrowMace@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Google doesn’t make money directly from harvesting your data, they make money from harvesting your data then showing you ads based on that data. So if you’re running an ad blocker then they aren’t making money from you (unless you pay them for stuff like subscriptions and apps). As ad blocking becomes more common they are definitely going to get more draconian to try to claw back that money (growth is infinite, profits must go up /s).

            Also BTW Google probably makes more like $50 per user per year on average (looking at revenue and internet population) so they would never offer a $2/year ad block unless forced to by regulation.

            • jasep@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              they make money from harvesting your data then showing you ads based on that data

              That’s part of it, yes. But they can also sell ad companies demographic data - males aged 25-44 clicked on this or looked at that for example.

              Google probably makes more like $50 per user per year on average

              I highly doubt the number is that low.

        • NightOwl@lemmy.one
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          1 year ago

          Look I hate YouTube ads too, and ads in general, but let’s say every user of a service is like you.

          I understand the message about needing to fund services to exist, but that stance I feel doesn’t always really work too well. Since if other users were like them then it’d also mean there might be a lot of stuff that doesn’t exist anymore which could be a pro like microtransactions ceasing to exist and move to subscription model failing.

          And for YouTube might be completely different where depending on their taste maybe click baits turned people away if the person hated them, so those don’t exist. And long winded videos attempting to take advantage of the algorithm failed if they were someone who didn’t like videos that wasted their time, and everyone is like them.

          Reddit might still support third party apps if everyone was like them, and lemmy bigger. That’s why if everyone was like them argument is just a weird one, since it turns minority actions into a majority and changes way too many things to focus on one singular thing.

        • KillerTofu@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          YouTube creates no content and it’s reliant on people volunteering their time and talent to them. Fuck the idea that we need to pay google to access content they only host and don’t pay fairly for.

        • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          To answer your questions - users such as this bring something more valuable than ad money. They bring data. Google harvests data and metrics on users in a million ways, packages this up, and sells it for considerably more than they make on ads. In free services such as this, YOU are the product.

          Ads suck, nobody wants to watch them, and they simply represent google maximizing shareholder value at every opportunity, as they are legally bound to do under American capitalism. YouTube ads are not a critical revenue stream that will make or break them.

          • cole@lemdro.id
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            1 year ago

            Copy-pasting this from a comment I made a few days ago. I’m so tired of this misconception. Google’s business model literally disincentivizes selling personal data. The business model is built on selling targeted advertisements. Google wants to keep this data to itself because it gives them a competitive advantage in the ad space.

            Selling your data would give competitors power in the marketplace. So yes, Google collects data and uses it, but no, Google does not sell your data. It sells targeting BASED on your data.

            Very different, regardless of if it is any better.

            • assa123@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Not all interested buyers are in the ad business, and governments can make payments in a way that is difficult to audit from a third party perspective, definitely not in any currency or a change in the balance sheet. I wish things where different but seems to me that paying won’t protect me from them harvesting every bit they can.

      • Salvo@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        I will quite happily pay a reasonable price for the privilege of avoiding ads.

        I understand why people block ads, even though they are a a free tier, even if I don’t agree with it.

        The fact that the cost of YouTube Premium almost doubled overnight is making me rethink my ethics, when my current subscription is up for renewal, I will be reassessing whether to cease watching YouTube, watch YouTube with ads or determine another way of supporting content creators.

          • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            this.

            i will happily support creators, but wont give money for google to continue their anti-internet quest.

    • Baby Shoggoth [she/her]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      Youtube produces almost none of their own content, instead they rely on other humans to create that content.

      Use your ad blocker if you want, but stop treating youtubers as google employees (they’re not, they often have a much more frustrating relationship than you do) and start supporting them through other means.

      To you, those people are just helping you waste your time. if that’s your real argument here, stop wasting your fucking time and do something else more worth your precious time, or start supporting content producers directly through non-youtube methods. Or just stop fucking watching.

      Those people aren’t on youtube because they’re buying into corporate google dick-wrangling, they want to produce videos and have them get watched, and youtube is a place that hosts their videos for free AND gives them ad revenue share for hosting youtube ads.

      You aren’t some hero for adblocking youtube but still watching it. google won’t notice your small dip in their revenue, but the youtuber who made it will.

      Wanna support the people who entertain you (or, i guess, “waste your time”, if that’s what you consider entertainment to be — if all you want is to waste your time, don’t ads do the same thing for you?). Pay them directly for their content. Want to take a fake stand that supports nobody but yourself and your own inconveniences, install an ad blocker and boast on the internet about how you’re totally fucking over google and the people who create youtube content by doing so. But don’t treat yourself like some hero for doing so.

      • Nobody@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        If content creators provide 90% or even 60% of value to YouTube, why is Google a trillion dollar company while major content creators are fighting for scraps that fall from their table? Why are content creators who aren’t in the top tier compensated so little for what they bring to the table?

        YouTube is nothing without content. Unionize. Stand together and get paid what you’re worth.

        • Baby Shoggoth [she/her]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          where do i find the 10-40% percent of youtube-produced content on youtube you’re talking about?

          Google is a trillion dollar company because they do far more than youtube, and make the majority of their money from taking a percentage of ad revenue. This does include youtube, and youtube is only profitable to google because they can sell ads on top of it, because video hosting on the internet is fucking expensive.

          i pay google nothing, just like you. i do, however, support my favorite youtubers outside of google revenue streams with my own money, either through direct support or merchandise.

          Both installing an adblocker and not even going to youtube will cost google money. I don’t care which you do. But if you do watch specific youtubers regularly, support them directly, even if you do use an ad blocker.

          You’re not a hero for adblocking google. You’re a hero if you support content creators outside of google, whether or not you watch them on youtube using an adblocker.

        • Baby Shoggoth [she/her]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          I was never defending google or youtube.

          I was defending the people who produce content on youtube, and who do not enjoy the benefits of google’s wealth and market position, and are just trying to create their content.

          adblock youtube if you want, but unless you’re also supporting the creators of your content outside of google, i have never paid google a dime either. don’t pretend this is about a big corporation. you just think you deserve to be entertained for free, regardless of who put in the effort to create it.

          If you’re REALLY anti-google/youtube, STOP USING THEM. If you watch them with adblock, google can still spin your usage statistics into something that will appeal to investors, but youtube creators will be wondering why their numbers dwindle, because they don’t have investors to (lie to / spin numbers at). You’re still helping youtube, even with an adblocker.

          On the other hand, if you support content creators outside of youtube? you are supporting them directly, without youtube’s involvement and without google even getting a cut. I do this for several youtubers, and support even more through merch and etc.

          But sure keep telling me i’m defending the landlords because i’m getting mad at you for mistreating the staff and pretending you’re sticking it to the landlords.

          • Spellinbee@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            To your point about watching YouTube with adblockers still helping Google due to viewership numbers. That’s exactly why after I stopped supporting blizzard (at first due to the blutzchung controversy, then everything else that happened) I immediately stopped playing hearthstone, yes, I was playing it free, I never spent any money on it, but I didn’t want to even indirectly help by giving them usage statistics, or by giving paying people even a little bit of a quicker matchmaking.

      • NightOwl@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        Thank you me for using Adblock. You are welcome me. Couldn’t have done it without me. I am my hero. Thanks me.

      • wahming@monyet.cc
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        1 year ago

        The modern Internet community has an interestingly illogical take on free services. Either use them or pay for an alternative. But the average user has grown up on free services and will happily insist on having their cake and eating it too

    • CallateCoyote@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I pay for Premium now since it includes music streaming which is convenient to use. If they raise the price too much, I’ll absolutely just go back to mp3s and deal with the ads on YouTube and just watch less content on there. $15 is about my cap before I do that.

    • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Unlock origin is the adblocker that people are installing. There are a lot of people with shitty adblockers out there, I guess they are switching.

      • cm0002@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I bet all those people with shitty adblockers are also probably googling better ad/YT compatible blockers lmaoo

        • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I searched “YouTube adblocker” on both google and DDG. The first mention of ublock origin was in the 1st page of Google (just at the bottom, under “recommended adblockers for Firefox”, the 2nd option). There was no mention of it on DDG, even though I clicked “more results” once (so searched the equivalent of 2 pages). The problem with Google search is not google, it’s SEO, that affects all search engines.

            • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Can confirm. I use DuckDuck Go and uBlock.

              Thing is, searching with DDG takes time to get used to, as it doesn’t work the same way as Google. Google uses a lot of convenient algorithms that are also a double edged sword.

        • soggy_kitty@sopuli.xyz
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          I just tried it and there’s plenty of results to Reddit references to U block origin on Firefox.

          You’re clearly making an assumption here

  • ohlaph@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    After YouTube started filling their search results with mostly shorts, I stopped using it for new stuff. It’s terrible now.

    • Rakonat@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah youtubes attempt at being tiktok is just awful and they don’t even have options to not have shorts show up in the feed. On top of shorts just being inferior versions of regular videos without functional controls

      • El Barto@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This is what gets me. Wanna show me shorts? Ok. But why the fuck am I not allowed to rewind a couple of seconds if I want to? It’s an artificial, completely useless limitation that had no place in 2023.

        So, no thanks.

        • Turun@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          For what it’s worth you can replace the “short” in the url with “watch” to get the old interface back.

        • cm0002@lemmy.world
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          They’re not even doing a good job at cloning TT. You’ve been able to seek in TT videos for a long time now lol

      • datavoid@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Most of my browser addons are aimed at making YouTube usable. Hiding shorts is priority one

    • Whirling_Cloudburst@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I started blocking those from appearing when they first showed up. There are a number of ways to do it. The Blocktube extension is one.

      • yerf@yiffit.net
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        1 year ago

        if you click ublock, select the settings cog, then in the tab that opens select ‘my filters’, you can enter the following to do the same thing: www.youtube.com##.ytd-rich-section-renderer.style-scope

        Personally I avoid installing too many extentions as they are quite literally apps that auto open whenever you just want to browse the web (regardless of if you’re going to youtube, you’re computer runs a youtube specific adblock)

    • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I switched to FreeTube and now all the shorts are on a separate page I can switch over to if I feel like watching them. It’s also got SponsorBlock built in. Now I can enjoy youtube with a clean, faster interface and google isn’t tracking a damn thing. All because google got greedy and made their user experience shit.

      • 100_kg_90_de_belin @feddit.it
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        1 year ago

        Google didn’t get greedy, it’s doing what it’s been doing for years. Before resorting to plunging us into Matrix-like pods, they’re trying to squeeze some more data out of users.

      • BitsOfBeard@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I only wish PiP worked the way it does in Firefox, not in Edge/Chromium. I like to have my browser next to full height video on my ultrawide, but PiP will not go beyond 1080 pixels tall.

      • Draconic NEO@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Also if you have enhancer it has an option to turn off the shorts bar and convert shorts to real videos.

    • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I hate how crappy search now is.

      It’ll show me a couple of videos, then shorts, then some kind of recommendation list. If I actually want to do a complete search for the thing, and only the thing, I’m looking for, I have to go to advanced options and specify I’m looking for videos. JUST videos.

      • SolarNialamide@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I don’t even care about the shorts showing up in search results. What really irks me is that you get like 3 videos related to search results, then some random unrelated shit, 3 relevant videos, more unrelated garbage, and then the rest of the actually relevant videos. I am specifically searching for something, just show me the damn thing.

        • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yes. The way the default search now works is that, when you search you get:

          • Three or four videos that are actually from your search.
          • Some recommended playlists.
          • The shorts tray that vaguely has some content related to your search.
          • Maybe two or three more videos from the actual search.
          • “People also watch” recommendations.
          • “Shorts for you” recommendations.

          If you want to get just your search results, cutting away shorts, playlists, and the recommendations that take up the majority of the search page, you’ll have to open up the filters and click on “videos” on the cl tent type list. Then you actually get to see the search results.

          • SolarNialamide@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Thanks for the tip, I’ll try that next time. Even though it’s infuriating that it’s necessary in the first place

    • nutsack@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      for real the discovery is terrible. it’s all junk and it’s a waste of my time.

    • GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      the shorts tend to be so bad and pointless. occasionally there is someone who makes an effort, but the number of low effort and garbage ones made me stop looking at shorts ever.

    • DLSantini@lemmy.ml
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      First thing I did when the shorts spam apocalypse started, was create custom ublock filters to strip them out of youtube as much as I could. Too bad I didn’t back them up before my system decided to go poof.

  • Zacryon@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    There’s also the option of biting the bullet and paying for YouTube Premium.

    No. Never. I’d rather stop using YT at all than giving in to coerced user-tracking.

    • NoRodent@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I mean, I might have considered paying for YT premium if I thought it offered some value (other than disabling ads) but I won’t sure as hell pay for anything that any company is trying to blackmail me into.

      • Stumblinbear@pawb.social
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        1 year ago

        I mean you didn’t buy it before so why would you now? You don’t need excuses. You just don’t want to pay for it. Own it.

        • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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          One could argue that we’re paying for it without our consent, given the fact that Google doesn’t pay anything in taxes. That’s a cool four billion a year (at least) that they get from the American taxpayer for free.

          • Stumblinbear@pawb.social
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            One could argue that we’re paying for it without our consent

            One could argue that the Flying Spaghetti Monster exists. That doesn’t make it remotely true.

            Google doesn’t pay anything in taxes

            Uh. Google pays a shitload in taxes. There hasn’t been a single year that they HAVEN’T paid taxes. They paid 11 billion in income taxes alone in 2022.

      • ArghZombies@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        But that’s the wrong way around. They don’t want you to pay, they make their money through advertising. They make far more money from advertiser’s paying to put up ads than they ever make from people paying for premium.

        Same as with Facebook now bringing in an ad-free version (in the EU anyway) - they charge higher than is reasonable so that people will opt for the ad-supported free version instead.

        It’s not that you are blackmailed into paying premium, it’s that you’re encouraged not to as a way of explicitly consenting to ads.

        Basically, you’re damned if you do, damned if you don’t.

        • LufyCZ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          lmao you’re so wrong on ads being more profitable than premium, especially on a per-user basis

          According to this you can expect to make around $18/1000 views. That’s with 55% going to the creator and 45% to Google. Which means that Google makes around $14.5 per 1000 views.

          Coincidentally, that’s also rougly the price of YouTube Premium. Are you telling me that you watch a thousand videos per month?

      • pascal@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I use it because YouTube music is included and it’s great while driving, it allows background play even with the screen off (I’m talking about mobile).

        There’s something more, but nothing that a pro user cannot already do with third tools.

        • Zacryon@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          I find it funny how sometimes apps “create value” by taking something away which is included by default in similar products and goes without saying.

          In this context: YouTube is the only app I know which is denying to work when put into background or with the screen off.

          Or take some car manufacturers who start asking for a fee just to use basic functionality.

    • soggy_kitty@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      For desktop install and use “FreeTube”.

      Alternatively for your android phone you can use “GrayJay”

      Never. Pay. For. YouTube. Premium

    • Resol van Lemmy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Abandoning YouTube is seriously more difficult than abandoning other “non-fediverse” general social media platforms, since it’s got so much useful content that gets straight up ruined by the company that owns the website.

      I doubt PeerTube is anything better than Vimeo, at least for now, things can improve after all.

    • OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      At this point, I don’t even care about the user tracking. I just don’t want to sit through unskippable ads anymore. Especially when it’s the same ad over and over again.

      • Rosco@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Well then you’re in luck, you have a lot of options for removing ads before giving money to YouTube.

  • Tygr@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Didn’t know about SponsorBlock until all this started. So many just found out ad blocking is possible.

    • LUHG@lemmy.world
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      Sponsor block is a different beast. Should we really be doing that to our content creators? No, definitely not. Is it them or the advertising company that suffers?

      Edit: Actually really surprised about this. Couple weeks ago people are sticking up for YT premium prices. Now, you are against helping the creators you watch.

        • KnightontheSun@lemmy.world
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          Agree. SponserBlock is just doing the clicking for me. I did the same thing manually for a long time as my regular youtoobers got sponsored. Good for them, but I don’t need to see it and they still got sponsored.

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        If you weren’t planning on paying for the product, the creator won’t take any hit from you using sponsorblock. In fact, the advertiser won’t either. Nobody will be hurt by it, because it was a massive waste of your time to start with.

        • LUHG@lemmy.world
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          Fair enough but you can’t plan on paying for a product before you have seen what it was.

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            Well, the blocker doesn’t stop me from seeing the ad, it stops me from wasting my time manually skipping the ad. I still don’t see how that’s going to change my mind about anything.

            Also, if you were thinking of getting anything from a youtube ad: they are almost exclusively bad products. If you need something, just do a tiny bit of research instead of going with the first thing a content creator agreed to shill for.

      • kratoz29@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Huh, Sponsorblock is basically muting TV ads like in the old days.

        Why should I be forced to watch a sponsor almost always totally unrelated to the content I seek to watch, and that the YouTuber decided to upload?

          • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Bingo. Buy a VPN for privacy just means, give us your data instead of your ISP.

            Now, a VPN provider may very well be more trustworthy than your ISP! But then again, maybe not… That depends on your circumstances and risk profile.

          • Kevin@programming.dev
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            He did eventually take one later on, which I can imagine must’ve been a bit of a painful decision ;-;

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              He declined the first one, because they wanted him to lie.

              He accepted the other, because they were fine with just facts.

              A VPN doesn’t protect your privacy. It only helps on websites without working https, which is ridiculously rare these days. Yes, it also hides your IP address, but that is really really irrelevant. If you wanted to stay truly anonymous you’d not log in anywhere and use Tor. The only actual use case is circumventing geo blocking.

              • TalkingCat-@lemm.ee
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                You can also circumvent geo blocking with a proxy, some of them are free, do not send any sensitive info on the free proxies however, not that a paid one is intrinsicaly safer, just like vpns.

        • LUHG@lemmy.world
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          Because the creator gets paid by them to provide you with a free product. If that fails to be the case you get nothing.

      • NightOwl@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        My favorite aspect of sponsorblock is blocking the incredibly repetitive ubiquitous script that every single channel copies of like, subscribe, ring the notification bell.

        • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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          This is actually why i don’t like it. Most of my subs do this kinda thing rarely but occasionally. Sponsorblock creates a gap in the video that is more jarring then the 1 second self promotion, wish there was an option to only block self promotions more then 4 seconds long.

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            I really can’t stand requests for likes, subscribes, notification bell at all. I actually hate it more than ads, and have backed out of many a video that didn’t happen to have the segment flagged at the beginning.

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            I’m not at my computer to check, but I’m like 70% sure you can set a minimum segment length for skipping.

      • redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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        You can still use sponsorblock and configure it to not skipping sponsor segments if you want, and still enjoying the benefits of automatically skipping useless segments such as intro, outro, subscription reminders, self promotion, recaps, etc.

      • MonkderZweite@feddit.ch
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        Whatever, either i have to manually switch forward or sponsorblock does it for me. Second option is less annoying.

      • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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        You’re absolutely right. Sponsorblock directly harms the average people making content, it has nothing to do with Google.

        It’s gross and reveals how much of the complaining about ads has absolutely nothing to do with privacy or malware or corporate profiteering or anything like that. These people are just nakedly selfish.

        Wear those downvotes with pride. They mean you have a conscience and feel empathy.

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          Sponsors don’t pay the creator less if you skip the sponsor segment. That’s not tracked, at least not in a way that google will share with the creator or anyone else. If that changes someday, sure, you have a point. For now skipping the sponsor segment is as harmless as skipping through the commercials on TV.

          • LUHG@lemmy.world
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            Keyword here is for now. Just pushing them to be more intrusive. Yes they may incrementally become more intrusive in the future but it’s a decent trade-off for free content.

        • LUHG@lemmy.world
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          Cheers. I don’t think I’ve ever had such a response to a normal ethical take. We complain about wanting free and open source products but by the looks of it nobody is able to sit through a 20 second sponsor.

          If we had everything on a free open source platform people would still skip the sponsored segment.

          I feel if the sponsor blocks keep up we’ll start to see the creators or sponsors combat it in ways we really don’t like.

      • yukichigai@kbin.social
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        The content creators get paid the exact same whether I skip the sponsor segment or not. YouTube doesn’t track that, or not in a way they share with anyone else at any rate. Sponsors aren’t going to pay the content creators less due to skips since they literally cannot see who skips the segment.

        In other words, it doesn’t hurt the content creator in the slightest.

      • Tygr@lemmy.world
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        I watch YT about once a week and usually an hour or less. Premium isn’t worth it for that low of use. Sponsors, I skipped, always. I’ve never once purchased from a sponsor. I also skipped subscribe crap manually (I’m not logged in, I can’t).

        SponsorBlock just does it for me, kinda nice. The creator gets paid by viewership so I have helped when I watch.

        Lemmy isn’t seen by 98% of the public so my mentioning it hardly spreads further awareness. What did spread it was YT themselves cracking down. It made news headlines and my own mother asked I come over and install one.

        YT Streisand Effected themselves. They demanded we not use them and got more people using them because of it.

        Now, my mom won’t see Google ads anywhere, not just YT. What a smart move because I know there’s probably a million new UBlock users.

    • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      The other person’s been downvoted pretty heavily so I’ll volunteer to accept some.

      Sponsorblock is a shitty tool for extremely selfish people that only hurts small-time content creators. You can’t argue about your data privacy, malware, corporate profits, or Google. Sponsorships are literally the least invasive and most direct form of financial support the average person can get for their content without you paying them directly. YouTubers do it because Google is already fucking them over. There’s absolutely no higher justification for it beyond annoyance at an extremely minor inconvenience and a sense of entitlement to the work of others.

      You people would go to a little league baseball game and tear down the banner for Tom’s Auto Care if you could. Not every attempt at making money is evil.

      • Rexios@lemm.ee
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        The creator isn’t losing money. They get paid to do the sponsorship. Skipping the segment has no effect on how much money they get because they already got it.

      • AtariDump@lemmy.world
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        You people would go to a little league baseball game and tear down the banner for Tom’s Auto Care if you could.

        If someone came out and shoved the banner in my face and didn’t let me watch the game until several seconds had elapsed, yes, I’d tear the banner down too. Because it’s unacceptable.

        But no one does that. The banner sits there in the outfield on the wall being unobtrusive and not interrupting the game or the flow of the game. That’s acceptable.

        Make the ads unobtrusive and not interrupt the flow of the video and I don’t care. The problem is YT / YTers don’t do that. That’s why Sponser Block exists.

    • Blue2a2@sh.itjust.works
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      I only heard about AdNauseum because of this whole debacle. It blocks ads, hasn’t temporarily broken (as far as I have seen), and I set it to “click” 80% of all ads it sees.

      I have probably screwed whatever profile they built on me, cost the ad buyers money bc clicks, hurt the conversion rate for purchases to cost google money, and even possibly made money for my favorite creators and sites (depending on how they’re paid).

      Though someone lmk if I am misunderstanding something about it.

      • Tygr@lemmy.world
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        Holy crap, now that is causing massive damage to advertisers. I didn’t know this existed either. If everyone used it, the entire internet would collapse because most of it is for-profit now, unlike 30 years ago (when I made my first site in notepad).

    • XEAL@lemm.ee
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      I discovered SponsorBlock after installing Smart Tube Next on a FireTV.

  • Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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    I love that all the centralized social media networks are scrambling to become shitty for profits right around the time users are realizing that they don’t need centralized servers to host their user-generated content. Users can take their content wherever they want and let these platforms die.

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      I’m not sure if we manage to do the same for video though; hosting these costs a lot more.

      • Muffi@programming.dev
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        Maybe we don’t need 4K 60FPS video to show Mr. Beast giving away more crap. Just because we can up the quality, doesn’t mean we should. Or maybe client-side real-time AI upscaling will make this a non-issue.

        • computergeek125@lemmy.world
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          Call me old fashioned but I’d rather see high native quality available for when it is relevant. If I’m watching gameplay footage (as one example) I would look at the render quality.

          With more and more video games already trying to use frame generation and upscaling within the engine, at what point is too much data loss? Depending on upscaling again during playback means that you video experience might depend on which vendor you have - for example, an Nvidia computer may upscale differently from an Intel laptop with no DGPU vs an Android running on 15% battery.

          That would become even more prominent if you’re evaluating how different upscaling technologies look in a given video game, perhaps with an intent to buy different hardware. I check in on how different hardware encoders keep up with each other with a similar research method. That’s a problem that native high resolution video doesn’t have.

          I recognize this is one example and that there is content where quality isn’t paramount and frame gen and upscaling are relevant - but I’m not ready to throw out an entire sector of media for this kind of gain on some media. Not to mention that not everyone is going to have access to the kind of hardware required to cleanly upscale, and adding upscaling to everything (for everyone who’s not using their PS5/Xbox/PC as a set top media player) is just going to drive up the cost of already very expensive consumer electronics and add yet another point of failure to a TV that didn’t need to be smart to begin with.

          • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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            The quality is something that depends on the content. If the video is just someone talking, 4K is overkill. And not every gameplay has to be recorded forever. Only the good ones. And even the videos can be rescaled after some time if nobody sees them.

        • Syrc@lemmy.world
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          I mean, didn’t Vine fail even with mostly low-quality videos? I’m assuming even 720p could be a challenge for a decentralized site.

          EDIT: Apparently I was misremembering

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        Is there some reason you can’t start up a decentralized content hosting platform. Just let anyone with a spare hd and a spare pc at home join up?

        Like I guess I don’t really want anything illegal on my PC… Maybe this plan is awful.

        • nicoweio@lemmy.world
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          This exists. For example, for general decentralized storage, there’s storj.io, and there’s PeerTube. But I guess there’s a reason it’s not more widespread. I’d happily be proven wrong, though.

    • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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      This 100%. Look at forums. Back in the early days, there were lots of little independent forums. Sites like Reddit took over because you could easily keep your identity across multiple forums and see the content from all your communities on one page. We gained convenience, but didn’t think too hard about what we were losing or who we were losing it to. Then along came enshittification and we are collectively realizing what we lost. Federation is of course the solution. As I see it, the only missing piece is monetization. Platforms like YouTube make it easy to monetize page views, Twitter / X is doing the same. That’s much harder in the fediverse.

      • Blackhole@sh.itjust.works
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        Patreon for monification?

        Ads suck. And honestly, if we had less content creators, they’d be fine. There are a lot of absolutely degenerates out there. Let’s cull the herd a bit and let us speak individually with our wallets.

        • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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          That’s a fair point. Patreon, or whatever comes next, needs to drastically reduce friction. That by the way is why Amazon is so successful, reducing purchase friction. Right now if you have something that a million people will take for free, and you start to charge just one penny for it, your audience of a million will drop to like 12. Not because people don’t want to spend a penny, but because they don’t want to fill out a form and put in their name address credit card number expiration date security code phone number email address etc. If there was a button they could click that was like ‘instant donate 5 cents’ most people would click that a lot.

          The closest thing I’ve heard to that was a crypto called basic attention token, which aimed to do just that. They are making a big mistake though in that they are only integrating with Brave browser rather than making a universal plug-in. So the idea of a universal solution is still a ways off I guess. But I think to make it zero friction it will have to be crypto based in some way.

      • mark@programming.dev
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        you could easily keep your identity across multiple forums and see the content from all your communities on one page

        RSS feeds have provided this experience for years. The problem is that a lot of sites stopped serving RSS feeds for their content. But sites like rss.app and openrss can be used to get RSS feeds for sites that don’t have them.

        • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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          RSS is great for content consumption. It’s a shame that many sites stopped serving it- same thing with podcasts, now everyone wants you to listen on this or that platform instead of just publishing a normal RSS feed full of MP3 files.

          That said though, RSS doesn’t help for participation, it’s a one-way tech.
          I guess if you have forums that put out RSS feeds you could aggregate them together for post titles, but that’s still clumsy. Lemmy does it much more elegantly.

        • daed@lemmy.world
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          My understanding of RSS is that it’s basically a list of metadata and links for content… Its always seemed to me to be a great way to aggregate the content you want to see. He did specifically mention keeping an Identity across multiple forums and I’m not aware of any RSS implementation that provides that functionality though… are you? That’s a huge feature to miss if we’re talking about social link aggregators like Reddit and Lemmy.

          • Rosco@sh.itjust.works
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            One of the main advantages of RSS is that it doesn’t track you or require an account for it to work. As you said it’s only a XML or JSON file wth the latest items posted on the website.

          • mark@programming.dev
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            Yeah, sorry I was specifically replying to part about seeing the content from communities (or everything on the internet, really) in one view. Keeping your identity across multiple forums is platform-specific and would be solved by Lemmy directly. RSS feeds would just give you the updates and the links directly to the content. But once you click through to go to each website, you’d just be using your already-logged-in state on the platform.

  • TheTimeKnife@lemmy.world
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    Youtube is a perfect example of why ad blockers exist. They use ridiculous ad volumes and spy on their users for data to sell.

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    Meanwhile, Youtube engineers and uBlock Origin volunteers are in a war of attrition, updating both the website (youtube, to block ublock) and uBlock Origin (the ad blocker, to unblock the ublock blocker) multiple times a day every day

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      I feel like uBlock Origin has been coming out ahead more often than not. I haven’t had to manually refresh my lists for the last few days.

    • Chozo@kbin.social
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      Yep, it’s going to be a constant game of cat-and-mouse from now on. Google isn’t going to relent on this.

      • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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        Oh, of course not. But uBlock Origin and pihole aren’t going anywhere. Hell, they’d probably have to get legislation to slow it down, but good luck fighting that battle. Hollywood’s war against piracy is a good comparison.

          • woddy@lemmy.world
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            Exactly. We’ve come a long way from $6/m netflix. I would rather give up youtube than pay them $10/m. I GLADLY paid $1/m to a twitch adblocker the other day. Ill pay, but not fucking $10/m when I can avoid it with some complications for free.

        • Draconic NEO@lemmy.world
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          Not even, they’ve already tried to make the case of Anti-adblock bypass violating DMCA and it hasn’t gone anywhere. Unlike piracy where it can and is claimed as a violation of copyright law.

    • ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Reminds me of the IM wars back in the latter 90s / early 00s. At one point, briefly, AIM and Trillian were pushing updates to negate each other every few hours.

      • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        It will always be a technology race. And it’s one that so far the content platforms have lost.

        Especially given they always abuse the upper hand when they have it, motivating the coding community to solve that problem right quick.

          • ItsMeSpez@lemmy.world
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            While it’s unlikely that they won’t attempt to get something similar to WEI onto the internet at some point, they have recently given up on this iteration of the concept.

          • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            I agree with you that such efforts are always a threat, and I’m reminded both of the V-Chip and the current efforts in the UK to keep blokes from watching their porn (anonymously, that is, without ending up on a registry of porn watchers), what may end up adding the right to porn access as a specific chartered right in our universal charters (and some national / state charters). Here in California, the right to produce porn is explicitly established in state law, which is embarrassing to some, a point of pride to others.

            The MPAA and RIAA also tried to get all the ISPs to agree to shut down (or throttle) service after twelve strikes by an anti-piracy board, who would track the IP addies of torrents. This fueled the development of magnet links (now the standard). And meant that Xfinity and AT&T had to be extra shitty to customers due to causes they don’t care about, while folks are already desperate to disconnect from them in favor of an alternative. So they haven’t really be enforcing it.

            And yes, Google is retreating on the WEI thing for now (if only they could get the federal government to pass a law) but the blowback on an eventual universal DRM is going to be severe, including revealing to the world that TPMs don’t do what they are supposed to do as explained to the end-user, making them hostile architecture. It’ll also potentially send increased traffic (and increased business) into the EU, or out of the US into less traceable regions, and get the determined end-user interested in the dark net, because watching a cat video without ads now requires the same savvy as getting access to CSAM, active revolutionary news and restricted chemistry configurations.

            What will be more interesting to me are the consequences I haven’t imagined. To quote a favorite princess, The more you tighten your grip, Tarkin, the more star systems will slip through your fingers.

            Anyway, the go ahead and downvote me line is creepy, and brushes against poisoning the well I don’t downvote dissenting opinions, (and can’t, anyway from my Lemmy instance).

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.one
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        Been using these apps for years, when YT does their crap the community gets it fixed and rolled out within a few days (worst has been two weeks).

        Lots of thankless devs and contributors dedicated to preventing YouTube from screwing us over!

      • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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        True, but there will be New Solutions. Or no YT for me at least. I am not willing to watch a single stupid add. Not one.