• deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      Adapt to what?

      If they’re mixing the content with the ads server side, it’s going to be like trying to extract the flour from the bread loaf.

      I’ve never understood why they haven’t just provided a method of doing this for all their customers. Like a Google Ad service that meshes together everything on the page with the ads server side, so it’s harder to target them client side.

      I mean, the dream is to make the Internet like cable television, isn’t it? Where it’s all one signal/stream. When ads could never be targeted and blocked or skipped unless you recorded and played back later with fast forward. Feels like we’ll get there eventually, with Chromium effectively calling the shots now.

      • huginn@feddit.it
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        5 months ago

        If they’re predictable with the timing and length then sponsorblock will still work.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          And if they’re not, the client can download the video twice and diff the copies.

          The most pernicious thing they could do is randomize the ads across users, but serve each user the same ads each time. In that case, you’d need a peer-to-peer client to compare hashes of chunks with other users to detect the ad segments.

          • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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            5 months ago

            Dear Satan,

            Your application for the Alphabet engineering position has been acce–[your message will continue after a word from our sponsors]

            • grue@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Honestly, I’d be happy to take the job and sabotage them from the inside.

            • 0^2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              5 months ago

              Yeah that could work… What about creating some sort of *arr for YouTube videos that downloads them and processes them with some sort of AI audio/video processing to remove the ads and recombine the video.

              Youtubarr it could be called. If we really want we can also remove the ads from the creator in the video too. It would still count as a view to the video too so creator won’t lose out on money.

              Anyone with objections to this?

              • Cubes@lemm.ee
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                It’s a neat idea, but computer vision stuff can get quite computationally expensive when done locally and is prone to input poisoning attacks (especially if the models used are open source).

                Not saying it wouldn’t be possible, but I think some of the other ideas posed here would be better starting places.

          • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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            5 months ago

            Or get the video once with a YouTube premium account and cut out anything that doesn’t match from the free version.

      • oyenyaaow@lemmy.zip
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        I think it’s more like extracting raisins? ad contents are still separate from the dough. finding the boundary conditions or ads hashes is guaranteed to work. whether it is feasible for adblockers is a different matter yet.

      • AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Even if adblockers aren’t able to remove the ads, I’m sure they can still make it so you can skip over them with the arrow keys or video timeline.

      • Rinox@feddit.it
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        5 months ago

        It’s not that simple. Right now it’s still separate video streams but presented as if they were the actual video, put in a queue of sorts.

        Ublock Origin released a script to block them yesterday btw

      • El Barto@lemmy.world
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        That’s why I said “What took them so long?”

        Adapt to what?

        I don’t know, man. I hope they succeed. If they don’t, then I will never visit YouTube again.

        Some other frontend that would allow me to fast-forward them would be fine, though.

      • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        I’ve never understood why they haven’t just provided a method of doing this for all their customers. Like a Google Ad service that meshes together everything on the page with the ads server side, so it’s harder to target them client side.

        The value that Google has always provided as an ad platform is that they’re targeted ads. You can target estimated age, geographic location, gender, estimated income. You can target your ads so narrowly that only a single person ever gets them even.

        To bake ads into the actual content stream they have to expend compute editing and re-rendering the video for as many times as they have ads that they intend to run on those videos. They can do it once with once batch of ads but then it’s only as targeted as who clicks on that video. Realistically they’ll want to do it 5x, 10x or more per video (and store every copie of the video, unless there’s some tech to store it as segments and seamlessly stitch then together as a single stream) to continue targeting the ads which gets very expensive fast

      • Gregor@gregtech.eu
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        3 months ago

        Google is required by EU law to show what is an ad and what isn’t. Adblockers could somehow detect that and skip forward.

    • Jay@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      Ya I’m actually surprised they hadn’t done that sooner.

      • Hotzilla@sopuli.xyz
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        You need to kill the market first, if you make ad riddled shit first, no one uses your system. Now there is no real competition, which means they will monetize their position. It is what corporations do. We need alternatives, and I know Fediverse has some.

    • CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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      They absolutely will. There are far more people (and probably smarter people to boot) working on blocking their shit than there are people at Google working on making it unblockable.

      This is an arms race where they will win the occasional battle, but always lose the war.

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        5 months ago

        Introducing our new surveillance-based, dynamically generated, native sponsored video ads with mandatory interactive minigame engagement.

        Careful - if we ever detect evasion, that’s a lifetime IP ban.

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          Careful - if we ever detect evasion, that’s a lifetime IP ban.

          And lose out on any potential future profits? Probably not. Especially if the IP is dynamic.

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        Index the content of the ads, identify it, and drop that data from the served video file? There may be a more clever solution, but that’d definitely work. It should be possible to checksum or just straight up store the data for the first couple of kilobytes of video data that would uniquely identify each ad.

        Youtube obviously must have a rota of however many ads which they can display, so eventually they’d all get identified although you’d be playing whack-a-mole forever as they release new ones. Isn’t Sponsorblock partially crowdsourced anyway?

        This would be challenging and fairly expensive, but worth it if you were motivated by sufficient spite.

        • atocci@lemmy.world
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          They say the ad is being integrated straight into the video stream on the server side though. It won’t be its own identifiable piece of data on the client side anymore.

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            Yes it will? The video stream is handed from the server to your browser or device. Once it arrives, your machine can do whatever it likes with it. Up to and including deliberately ignoring part of the data, and since Youtube videos are buffered your client can skip to whatever part of the video is past the ad provided it’s been buffered that far.

            • atocci@lemmy.world
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              But how? Unless I’m misunderstanding how video encoding is done, you shouldn’t be able to reliably identify what’s an ad vs what’s actual video once it starts getting mixed together. The ad will be encoded differently for every video it’s inserted into.

              I could be completely wrong about this, but the same ad clip’s data should end up looking completely different depending on any number of things.

              • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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                Most encoding formats are deterministic, including the VP8/VP9 codec that Youtube uses. I imagine they could deliberately insert some manner of randomization in there if they really wanted to, and if they intend to carry through with this plan they may have to. But the same input with the same encoder (and settings) should produce the same output every time, at least if you begin counting from a keyframe.

                Even if it can’t be identified on a binary level with clever tactics, which I think it will be unless they do some kind of picture-in-picture thing, it should be trivial with current hardware identify it even with a fairly crude optical recognition system and a database. I.e., sample N number of points on the output and gauge the average RGB data for each for a couple of frames, and if that matches our entry for the ad in our crowdsourced database, skip ahead X seconds based on the database. Even better if you did it on the keyframes.

                Doing it based off of the audio of the ad should be even easier, since acoustic fingerprinting is a pretty cheap technology to implement these days.

                The other question will be if Youtube is dumb enough to always insert the same type of ads in the same place in each video, which they may be at least to start with, so a very simple table of “skip X amount of time at Y timecode on Z video” would be feasible. Or even better, if they hard insert the ads into the video to save on processing time, such that they never change. Are they going to try to insert ads and encode video to serve to individual users in realtime? Doubt it. That’d be bonkers. Youtube already chews on uploaded videos for sometimes upwards of an hour before having them ready to serve… I don’t think they’re ready to commit to and pay for the compute power to try to pull a stunt like this in realtime.

                All of this is going to require some manner of crowdsourcing, unless we get really good at using AI against them or something (which’d be immensely satisfying, come to think of it).

              • El Barto@lemmy.world
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                If a song can ne fingerprinted (e.g. Shazam), so can ads. Even when they’re part of a larger video.

              • Voyajer@lemmy.world
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                Twitch does the same thing but you can still circumvent it. Worst case users may need a VPN to a country that doesn’t have many ads.

            • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              What part of the data?

              The whole point of this is they want to meld the ad data with the content in such a way that there are no identifiers anymore.

              If what you’re suggesting were possible, they wouldn’t be bothering with this.

              • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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                Define “meld.”

                If they’re encoding the ads and the content into the same video stream, which appears to be the proposal, your client still has access to the entire video stream and in fact must do so in order to play it.

                Even if you’re not going to be able to identify an ad on the raw binary level, and my proposal to do that was just spitballing anyway, the world is just absolutely chock-a-block full of audio and video content identification technologies that could be co-opted to identify specific ads, at which point your client could simply not play the section of the video stream containing them.

              • El Barto@lemmy.world
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                If what you’re suggesting were possible, they wouldn’t be bothering with this.

                You’re giving Google waaaay too much credit.

                They tried other methods prior to this, and failed. So they thought those methods were effective, and they totally bothered implementing them.

        • subtext@lemmy.world
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          Except with AI what’s to stop the advertisers from dynamically generating ads on the fly that are just ever so different from the original so as to throw off this kind of blocking.

        • SubArcticTundra
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          5 months ago

          Perhaps the ads could be fingerprinted the same way Shazam fingerprints songs

          • Kushan@lemmy.world
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            This is exactly what will happen.

            Diff the same video a few times and you’ll be able to figure out which is injected content and which isn’t.

            Separate out the injected content and you can fingerprint that content like how Plex or Emby fingerprints intros to TV shows (i.e. it’s a solved and known problem).

            Then you can reliably identify the injected and content, you know how long it is and can just tell the client to skip it.

            This won’t be easy, it’ll require more than folks indexing ad content but it’s feasible.

          • ByteWelder
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            Users can mark videos and submit that content. Users can vote on other users’ marking of content. It won’t work if YT streams the ads in if they randomly change the timestamp at which the ad(s) start.

            • El Barto@lemmy.world
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              Yup! Oh, I know how sponsorblock does it, but the question was more about highlighting that it’s theoretically possible. Unless they do what you describe.

  • veng@lemmy.world
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    Even if it comes down to a browser addon placing a black rectangle over the video and muting browser audio when an ad plays, I’ll be choosing that over watching ads.

    • DiagonalHorse
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      I’ve done something similar by mixing two extensions together in times where unlock origin wasn’t keeping up with YT changes (ad muting extension plus auto skip extension). It worked really well for when you had the video in the background of a game or work, and if I were solely watching the video it was just a trigger for a phone break during the video

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    I wouldn’t even mind the ads if they just played maybe one per three or four videos. That would still bring in a massive amount of money without pissing everyone off.
    Instead we get up to two ads every couple of minutes.

    It’s all about blatant greed.

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    Honestly, I am surprised it took them this long. This technology has existed for a while, there is even a standard for it (see: SCTE-35).

    The harsh truth of the matter is that YouTube is a victim of its own success. The sheer scale of what is needed to keep the platform running at its current level of activity is something that I think most people don’t give a second thought to. It requires a truly astonishing amount of technical expertise, infrastructure, monitoring, throughput capacity, not to mention sheer compute and storage, to keep it running. And that is considering the technical side alone, never mind the business that has evolved around it

    All of the above costs money. A lot of money. So much money that only a shitty mega corporation with no moral scruples would ever be able to afford to run the platform, let alone turn a profit. And so here we are.

    There are niche alternatives like PeerTube, but in practice it is currently in no state to be a drop in replacement. If the fediverse had to deal with the amount of traffic and content from YouTube in its current state, it would collapse immediately. This won’t change until the user base begins to increase, but to do so requires an incentive for people to jump over. And sadly, far too many people just don’t care enough about avoiding ads to do so.

    I think in the long term there will be a reckoning; no matter the size of your platform you are not invulnerable to change. Nobody back in the early 2010s could foresee Twitter falling from grace, and look how that turned out. YouTube will eventually die, the only question is who will be footing the bill for what replaces it.

    In the meantime, if you’re unable or unwilling to deal with YouTube’s ads, or pay to skip them, then just don’t engage with the platform at all. Read a book. Touch some grass. They haven’t found a way to monetize that (yet).

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      If the fediverse had to deal with the amount of traffic and content from YouTube in its current state, it would collapse immediately.

      The Fediverse would be a very different place if it was hosting anything remotely close to YouTube tier traffic. FFS, how much of the Fediverse is even outside English speaking countries? None of our systems are getting bombarded with hundreds of gigabytes of Good Morning messages like Whatsapp is dealing with in India, for instance.

      So much of the content on these big services is both trivial in terms of audience and enormous in terms of relative file size. My sister-in-law sent me a thirty minute compilation video from their latest summer vacation, which she hosted to YouTube. That video is going to get maybe five views, unless one of us goes back to watch it a second time. How much is it costing YouTube to host and stream? Obviously far more than what they make from any of us.

      Now scale that up to millions.

      The Fediverse isn’t trying to do anything remotely like that.

      • cuzit
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        This specific example is one thing that self hosting is arguably better for. I’ve made a few shitposting memes and the like that are five seconds long and uploaded unlisted just to share with friends that get immediately flagged and banned for DMCA that I’ve taken to just self hosting them. They’re getting like three views anyway because the world was never meant to see them.

        People sharing videos with friends and family seems like a problem that’s already solved, if you really don’t want to use YouTube. Big channels that get millions of views are the real issue.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          Self-hosting, certainly (to a degree anyway). But the Fediverse isn’t self-hosted. I’m not keeping a catalog of comments on my computer that you lose access to when I close my laptop.

          Self-hosting also tends to require dedicated hardware. Less of a big deal as the real cost of your own personal little server setup has plummeted. But still something that’s predicated on always-on internet connectivity in a way that’s not always practical.

          • BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk
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            The other issue with self hosting is while I’m comfortable running web services on a server in my house on my local network I know I lack the competence to harden my server sufficiently to open up a web streaming interface to the web.

      • booly@sh.itjust.works
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        It’s not just file size either. Video basically has several different things going on, where improving on one aspect tends to require compromise on the others:

        • Resolution
        • Frame rate
        • Quality
        • Bit rate (file size)
        • Encoding complexity
        • Decoding complexity (which affects battery life of mobile devices viewing the content)
        • Robustness for dropped or corrupted data

        Over time, the standards improve, but generally benefit from specialized hardware for decoding (thus making decoding complexity a bit more complicated when serving a lot of people with different hardware).

        Netflix, for example, serves a small number of very large files to many, many people on demand. That means they benefit from high encoding complexity, even if it shaves off a tiny bit of file size, because spending a few extra hours on encoding a movie that’s 10mb smaller is worth it if 10 million people watch that movie, as that’s 100 terabytes of traffic saved.

        But YouTube/Facebook and the others with a lot of user-submitted video, they’re ingesting hundreds of hours of content every minute, chopping it up into like 5 different resolutions/quality levels.

        Then YouTube has a shitload of processes for determining which video gets which treatment. A random upload of a kid’s birthday party might get a few hundred views at most, so YouTube cares less about file size and more about saving that computational complexity up front. But if a video hits 1000 views in a few minutes, that means it’s on the cusp of going viral, and it might be worth re-encoding with the high cost encodings that save space/bandwidth.

        If a service doesn’t scale, it won’t be necessary to have that kind of complexity in the service. But those videos will load a bit slower, use a little more battery and bandwidth to watch, be more prone to skipping/distortion, etc.

        Video is hard. User submitted video is harder. Especially at scale.

    • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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      All of the above costs money. A lot of money. So much money that only a shitty mega corporation with no moral scruples would ever be able to afford to run the platform, let alone turn a profit.

      It’s cheaper than you think.

      Some estimates put the total number of YouTube Videos around 500 million, and I’ll say each video takes 200MB to store every version. That’s only an extra $24 million a year. With back-end processing and other stuff I’ll bump that total up to $2.0 billion a year for hosting fees, if you were to run YouTube on AWS.

    • Emerald@lemmy.world
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      It requires a truly astonishing amount of technical expertise, infrastructure, monitoring, throughput capacity, not to mention sheer compute and storage, to keep it running.

      Indeed. Yet they still add stupid features like 8K video and high-bitrate 1080p. What the heck are they doing? Who needs more then 720p anyways?

      • AwesomeLowlander@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        An engineer who needs a line item on their CV to get promoted.

        Seriously though, 1080p is not a lot if you’re on a big monitor or TV. At 720p you can start pixel counting on some displays

    • Emerald@lemmy.world
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      How about people just host videos on their own infrastructure or rented VPS? Honestly the idea that creators should get paid by YouTube/Twitch/etc confuses me. Those services if anything should be charging creators money as they are providing them computing resources.

    • nifty@lemmy.world
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      All of the above costs money. A lot of money. So much money that only a shitty mega corporation with no moral scruples would ever be able to afford to run the platform, let alone turn a profit. And so here we are.

      Or that’s what we’re led to believe. Someone could say the same for an OS, but we have many open source alternatives. We need an open source alternative to YouTube, and perhaps with some innovation that may be possible. You don’t need storage, for example, if content is just streamed in a p2p manner, even with a time delay so people can watch something whenever

      Edit: some context https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/P2PTV

      For the idiots downvoting explain why, or I’ll just believe you’re YouTube shills

      • brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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        Your equating the software development with the running costs.

        People have made OS and people have made YouTube alternatives. But that’s nothing compared to the quantity of servers, networking infrastructure, storage, power usage, and labor to maintain and update it.

        P2p isn’t a valid alternative because that’s just shifting costs onto your users. Just because a central entity isn’t taking on the burden of cost doesn’t mean the cost isn’t there.

        Pictures and text are rather low usage, both in storage and networking but video isn’t. Especially when millions are watching videos at the same time.

        • the_doktor@lemmy.zip
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          Maybe if we would stop expecting these sites to provide wasteful ultra-huge megaHD videos, it wouldn’t be a problem. Hell, even with YouTube, maybe if they just served DVD-quality videos they wouldn’t need to push tons of ads on us in the first place. Our expectation for this crazy new pointless ultra-sharp quality videos is ridiculous and is part of the problem with content delivery these days.

        • nifty@lemmy.world
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          What you’re saying is valid in a model where the server hosts content and provides it on demand, and that’s not what I was describing.

          Here’s the model I had in my head, but I am not sure if anyone has attempted this yet:

          1…user uploads a video which borrows resources from p2p network

          2…the shared burden is shifted around as nodes become active or inactive

          3…content is always available in asynchronous, on demand fashion

          I don’t work in distributed and networked systems, so I don’t expect the above model to strictly be based in reality, but it’s not that fanciful based on the wiki article I shared

          I guess it’s a fair point that users maybe don’t want to be responsible for the burden. In which case, I guess why complain about ads then 🤷‍♀️

          • BlueMagma@sh.itjust.works
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            You are kinda describing “maidsafe”

            But maidsafe isn’t fully free, you technically pay access by sharing/lending hardware to the network

            • nifty@lemmy.world
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              Cool, so I don’t understand why it has to be fully free. I think people should be comfortable taking control of their technologies otherwise they should be okay with getting what they get from the service providers

              • BlueMagma@sh.itjust.works
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                I totally agree with you, I’m happy to pay when the service is good. I was only mentioning it wasn’t fully free because I know some care about that.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            You’re right that this is possible. But the speed and quality are going to decline considerably under this model, particularly across distant regions.

          • AwesomeLowlander@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            In which case, I guess why complain about ads then

            Because the average internet user (and many FOSS users, sadly) have gotten into the mindset that they deserve everything for free, the way they want it.

            (For those taking offense to the bit about freeloading FOSS users, I refer you to the FOSS dev burnout trend we were discussing a month ago)

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        For the idiots downvoting explain why, or I’ll just believe you’re YouTube shills

        Fuck you.

      • BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk
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        5 months ago

        Storage and maintenance. OSes are miniscule in comparison to the data YouTube stores, we’re in the multiple exabyte range here. Someone’s got to pay for it somewhere. Floatplane might be a decent comparison as to what a FOSS YouTube might look like - they have a dedicated dev team and charge per channel to view, following more than a couple of creators would become cost prohibitive for me personally.

        You absolutely need storage in a P2P network, the data doesn’t just magic into existence, not only that but if there are insufficient peers in the network then you’re not watching the video, smaller creators and older content would likely suffer as a result.

      • PeggyLouBaldwin@lemmy.world
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        peertube uses webtorrents. it’s viable. it works. owncast is fully self-hosted. it works. all the people downvoting are repeating a talking point, and have never implemented these projects.

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          They have a point about server costs and maintenance, which is why I suggested community garden type server farms.

          I also didn’t need to call people idiots, but we’re all humans sigh

      • Emerald@lemmy.world
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        Someone could say the same for an OS, but we have many open source alternatives.

        An OS requires significantly less resources. The only online features you need for an OS is a website to market the OS and host ISO’s. Then you need a server to distribute packages to users. Packages which are significantly smaller then HD or 4K videos

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        We can barely keep Mastodon / Lemmy instnaces floating that host text, gifs and pictures.

        That doesn’t include paying the content creators.

        Just because you’re getting shit for free, doesn’t mean that other people will want to do it for you for free.

        Fuck you.

      • credit crazy@lemmy.world
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        Considering I remember some project in the past tried something like that in the past and found that because you can’t control when people log off you can’t guarantee files will transfer in one piece not to mention how expensive it was having everyone’s computer constantly using Internet and computing stuff. For that reason I think the main problem here is that we are trying to centralize video sharing onto one platform. I instead propose we encourage people to make their own platforms. Like if you want to watch idk PewDiePie you go to PewDiePie.com and encourage people to explore the Internet instead of just sitting on one site. I suppose as a step in the right direction I propose that we get people to make online data bases using laptops/desktops that have nothing but xzamp and the videos you wish to upload to the web. Then we all collectively promote a sort of aggregation site that promotes everyones videos that way the aggregation site only has to store a bunch of hyperlinks and handle all the traffic while you the content creator just have to handle the traffic your content generates now the only challenge is making this idea profitable because if content creators can’t profit few if any will make content and if the aggregation platform can’t break eaven then we are back to square one of no one knowing where to look for content.

        • nifty@lemmy.world
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          For that reason I think the main problem here is that we are trying to centralize video sharing onto one platform. I instead propose we encourage people to make their own platforms. Like if you want to watch idk PewDiePie you go to PewDiePie.com and encourage people to explore the Internet instead of just sitting on one site.

          Basically old web but with aggregators, I don’t hate it. I think there needs to be a way to alleviate burden from content creators in a way. Tbh, maybe we need community server farms which are jointly supported, like community gardens in a way

          • Furbag@lemmy.world
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            Old web was awesome. Audiences were smaller, but content was far more personalized and less corporate. I could see link aggregators and relay networks coming back and people self-hosting more of their own content in the future, but it would have to take a massive shift in consumer behavior to wean themselves off of the teat of Web 2.0 spoon-feeding them their content and making content creating/sharing as frictionless as possible.

      • ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world
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        a) I downvoted you b) I am a YouTube shill c) Fuck you

        that means I get money from them, right? I’m still waiting for my check. YouTube is the best.

  • Loce@lemmy.world
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    All this enshittification might be good for me. I think i might start reading more books instead of watching youtube. Fuck you google, I’ll never buy yt premium nor watch you ads.

    • Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world
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      Yeah that’s what I did when reddit shit the bed. I’m spending the free time with books and getting back into gaming. It’s an improvement really.

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        I can’t point to any one hobby that truly picked up my reddit time, but I do feel like everything I’m doing in its place is more productive

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        You do know physical books exist, dont you? :) I did not say ebook.

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            Those aren’t super intrusive. It’s not a loud ad that has to load, yell at you and slows down getting to the content I question, and printed ads in books don’t disrupt a music listening session by playing shitty ad music between songs as you’re getting a specific mood on. Print ads don’t bug me the way web and video ads do

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          Many physical books have ads in the beginning and end. I would dare to say all. At the very least, a small “banner” ad for the publisher on one page.

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            Do you have to watch it for 30 seconds before you’re allowed to turn the page? Does it pop up every 5 pages and can’t be skipped?

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        Not OP, but I would definitely pay for premium if they offered a lower cost version that was only ad-free YouTube. But I won’t pay when they justify the higher cost with forced bundling of other services I am not interested in and have no use for, e.g., YouTube Music.

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        $13.99/mo is pretty steep, and realistically I’d have to get it for my wife too which effectively doubles the price and would make it the most expensive streaming service I’ve ever subscribed to (behind SeriusXM which at least has to finance literal satellites in space and delivers me radio when I’m in dead zones with no cell towers). More than my budget right now will allow for sure (I just cancelled every subscription after rechecking my budget)

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    If they do that and Adblock doesn’t work anymore, the solution is quite simple - stop watching YouTube. Sure, there will be some content creators that I will miss. Maybe it will be time to move to Nebula.

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      Nebula is paid, you can also pay YouTube and remove ads.

      Nebula is cheaper but it also has a very small fraction of the content that YouTube has. So I really don’t see why moving to another paid service with less content is a solution for anyone.

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        Nebula has most of the content creators I would pay money to support, and more of that money would be going back to them.

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          Nebula has a small fraction of creators. Admittedly a lot of good ones, but not all, or even most. It’s just not a solution for most people.

      • JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world
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        Similar reason as people moving from Spotify to Tidal. The creators get paid more per view on Nebula than on YouTube.

        Besides, I imagine there’s quite an overlap of people that watch the type of content that goes up on Nebula and the people that are willing to pay for the content.

        • shinratdr@lemmy.ca
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          Also very true, not just USD though. CAD, GBP, AUD as well as others. But yeah in many countries YouTube has market pricing whereas Nebula doesn’t.

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          Neither is YouTube if you pay them. It just strikes me as odd to say “Fuck YouTube for pushing all these ads, I’m switching to Nebula” when Nebula is paid and the only reason they are getting ads on YouTube is because they refuse to pay.

          It’s essentially punishing YouTube for having an ad-supported option at all.

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            It’s about incentives. Alphabet is in the biz of serving advertisers. That’s their paying customer. This is baked into their entire ecosystem of products and services. It’s who they are. It shows in everything they do.

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      It’s not like I’m running out of new content from a lot of different directions. I previously said that when YT ads become unavoidable, I’ll just stop going to that site. Someone accused me of trying to dunk on them by saying they’d lose me, but the real answer is that I have too much content to fit in to get to all of it already. If watching content becomes frustrating, there’s other content that won’t frustrate me as much. At least for now. It’ll all turn to shit on a long enough timeline.

      And, you know, as someone else mentioned, there’re books. I like to read and currently do my reading at a park or on days when I’m asked to be in the office. If I run out of brain-rotting content to watch at home, maybe I’ll start reading at home more. Though I’ll probably find other ways to fuck off because I’m good at getting distracted, hence why I read away from home anyway.

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      If ad block breaks I no longer consider YouTube videos to be content. They’re just ads.

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      5 months ago

      PeerTube. Except nobody’s going to use it until everybody uses it.

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          Load it to what? Who’s going to pay for all the bandwidth and storage. How much are y8u willing to host? Peertube is never going to take off because it well cost users and people like free.

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              That’d require a bit more knowledge than the average YouTube user has, unfortunately.

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            Who’s going to pay for all the bandwidth and storage.

            The users – it’s all bittorrent.

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            Just add “decentralized web3 mining” somewhere in the page and crypto-dipshits will host the shit out of it. No actual cryptocurrency nor even a whitepaper required.

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            You’re right, but I dream that one day enough people will realise that the “free” model is shit and be willing to pay.

            I’d love to support a content producer on peertube who hosts their own content - the proviso being that their content is engaging enough to want to watch.

      • Howdy@lemmy.zip
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        I just went and looked to see if peertube is remotely viable… technically seems working. I found an app on f-droid, got on a bigger instance (1k users seems about the biggest). Videos load and play. There isn’t much content at all. A real shame. So yeah we don’t have an option

        • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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          Other than using Patreon or something on the side, I don’t see how anyone is going to make money off of creating Peertube content, either. Becoming a millionaire Youtube star à la Mr. Beast or Linus or whoever the fuck is obviously every aspiring videographer’s goal on there, whether it actually happens or not, and that inherent commercialization draws creators to the platform regardless of whether or not we think it’s for good or for ill.

          Peertube, if it ever takes off, will probably be like early Youtube in that the people posting to it will be enthusiasts who want to, not personalities doing it in the hopes of getting rich. That might be a good thing, depending on how you look at it, but don’t ever expect the kinds of ultra-produced, professional content we see on Youtube these days coming from people who can afford to hire camera teams, video editors, sound people, scriptwriters, on-location shoots, etc., etc.

      • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
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        I upload my videos there. Started off because professor wanted us to record ourselves then I just uploaded whatever. It’s not much but it’s honest work.

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        PeerTube doesn’t have the allure given by the chance of getting paid for what you upload

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    it hurts so much that it is VERY hard to replicate youtube given the insane upkeep costs. I would leave in a fucking heartbeat but so many good creators only post there

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        Not because they couldn’t but because they willfully operated at a loss to quench potential competition. The reason there is no replacement on YT is that all the content is on YT and creators won’t shift to other platforms because their whole audience is on YT as well.

        YT is not a video sharing platform anymore, it’s a market. And that’s why it sucks so bad.

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        There’s no way to know, Google doesn’t report YouTube profit separately in their financial statements. The closest department is “Google services” which does have a 34% profit margin.

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      it’s hard to replicate, has high upkeep, big authors’ community. it seems YouTube deserves to be paid despite all the negativity towards it.

  • ramble81@lemm.ee
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    This is where we need to start harnessing AI for our advantage rather than corporations. Have it scan the videos as it buffers and automatically remove the ads.

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        comskip.exe does it well on free to air TV, but I suspect the methods it uses might not work so well for Sponsorblock etc. That said, maybe a hash can be made of the video every ten seconds, and when the playback hash differs, skip that ten second block. Computationally intensive I suspect, but might work for embedded ads.

        • AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world
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          Only works if google inserts ads without re-encoding the video. I think that’s possible, as long as you only cut only keyframes of the video (shutter encoder has a feature to cut without re-encoding, and it warns of this limitation)

    • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      And then Google sues the AI provider to stop them from doing that.

      AI is not our tool, it is a corporate tool, for corporate profits, that they deign to let us dabble with, but only when it suits them.

      • AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world
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        You could probably train something like that on semi-reasonable consumer hardware. Ads often have a very distinctive style and tone, and you need only a single output - the probability of it being any given second being an ad. It would probably take a lot to run though, you better hope the people who install the extension have good PCs. And, it would probably never get 100% accurate, you’d have to put up with still seeing some ads and having to rewind when it skips over valid video.

        • iN8sWoRLd@lemmy.world
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          it might even be ridiculously simple given that ads almost 100% of the time have louder audio than the content by design.

        • Azzu@lemm.ee
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          It’s usually even easier than that… In my jurisdiction, ads have to be clearly labeled and identified. It should be relatively trivial to detect this label.

  • TheReturnOfPEB@reddthat.com
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    I’ve decided I’m going to do freelance ads for free for exposure on a comment by comment basis while I drink this refreshing iced cold Coca Cola.

    • GrymEdm@lemmy.world
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      That sounds like the perfect beverage to keep my reactions razor sharp while I enjoy the split-second thrills of playing League of Legends with my attractive, ethnically diverse friends.

  • Frank Ring@lemmy.world
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    When I see an ad on the internet, I purposefully look away to not look at it.

    It is deeply ingrained in my brain to never let ads win.

    I don’t know how my parents are doing it with cable TV.

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        Of course, I use uBlock Origin.

        But sometimes, I’m on a fresh install or on a friend’s computer and I forget that I don’t have an ad blocker.

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    It was about time, was always strange that Twitch did it first, and just like over there I’m hopeful some clever people will still make scripts capable of blocking ads.

    • pyre@lemmy.world
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      is there a way to experience peertube that comes even close to youtube? i took a look at some instances and they’re always like here’s a page that looks like it was made in 1993 and only had videos of one dude.

    • WarlordSdocy@lemmy.world
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      As much as I want something like that to happen I don’t see it happening for video platforms. Since most people wouldn’t switch platforms from YouTube since the creators they like are on YouTube and those creators won’t switch platforms cause they won’t be able to make a living on another platform unless it’s another big one like TikTok. The only alternatives to YouTube that have really worked are more niche subscription platforms like Nebula and Floatplane. Which only work as an additional platform to YouTube as a way to get some extra stable income that isn’t ad dependent.

      • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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        I agree in that its probably not the right time in 2024.

        I also don’t think bittorrent is the right tech.

        That said, as yt becomes more toxic there’s more demand for alternatives.

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        It’s certainly possible (e.g. take a hash of the first few frames of the ad and you can detect it pretty much anywhere and cut the right amount out of the stream).

        But it’s a lot more involved than just hiding an element on a webpage or blocking the same bit of JS every time.

        And while I can see ways to automate it (take two streams for different users, compare differences, etc), it will likely end up being quite intensive on resources.

        The only long term solution is “stop using Youtube”. We need some fediverse style P2P replacement, where we pay for the videos with our outgoing bandwidth, and we’re not there yet. Being a trillion dollar corporation sure does give you a lot more options in how you host things.

      • umbrella
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        and twitch is still adblockable. it does look harder though, it bugs out sometimes. i’m sure there will be a great solution, there always is.

        and fuck google while i’m at it, adblocking is only growing because of how egregious ads are getting.

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          Yeah, definitely not impossible. I had to install some TamperMonkey scripts to get Twitch adblock working, but it works.

    • TootSweet@lemmy.world
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      It might be doable automatically. If they inject the ads at the time of viewing and not before storing the video, then it’s possible that two downloads just a few sconds apart will have different ads. So if yt-dlp downloads twice and compares the two files, theoretically it can get a pretty good idea with high confidence of what content is ad and what content is… well… content.

      That technique of course would require multiple downloads of the same file, but yeah. I suppose yt-dlp could also keep a backlog of “fingerprints”/“signatures” of ads its seen in the past that can be used to remove ads from later downloads with the same ads without having to download twice.

      Also, even absent such a technique as what I just described, programs like NewPipe and such will still probably allow for manually skipping ads where I’m sure the official YouTube app or the web interface would deny/prevent skipping.

      Edit: Actually, it also occurs to me that in order to make ads not skippable, the server will have to send messages to the *official clients saying “and here’s the portion of the video you can’t skip.” In which case yt-dlp or NewPipe or whatever could just be like “oh, cool, that’s the bits I need to skip atuomatically.” And if the server doesn’t send that metadata, then all ads will be skipable on the official clients. (Though I guess I’m assuming that they’ll move exclusively to these injected-into-the-video-stream ads and away from the ads as they work now.)

    • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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      I doubt it. You’ll have to edit your videos after download. Learn ffmpeg and you can probably pipe the content in there and cut it out in one line.