Comment on YouTube Tests Showing Ads When You Pause a Video, Calls it ''Pause Ads''
woelkchen@lemmy.world 6 months agoThe competition for youtube is peertube, not another centralized platform.
I gave two examples. I was not making a statement in favor of centralized platforms.
Also PeerTube tech is leagues behind YouTube tech.
It just needs content.
So replace “Nebula” in my first example with “PeerTube”. Works just the same when video creators post to both and just keep promoting the YouTube one.
sandman@lemmy.ca 6 months ago
What? Nebula is a paid streaming service.
Peertube is free.
Grangle1@lemm.ee 6 months ago
Unfortunately, the free, decentralized nature of FreeTube actually makes it more difficult to be a legitimate YouTube successor. The main reason: monetization. Most of the big creators people watch on YouTube don’t just do their videos as a hobby, it’s a job where they make their living. Some of the biggest will make enough in stream donations or Patron pledges to not have to worry about ads or sponsorships, but there’s a huge “middle class” of content creators, you could call it, who live video ad check to video ad check with Patreon or stream donations being supplemental to the ad revenue. Drop that ad money, and those creators will have to either figure out how to quickly multiply their income from other sources or there would be an extremely sharp drop in both quantity and quality of videos. Expect a ton of much-beloved channels to die in the process. To be any sort of competitor at all while retaining its free, decentralized nature, you would need to have many, many times more instances than exist now, with a large percentage of them run by entities with enough resources to pay for both server costs of hosting and distributing large amounts of content and the cost to pay and support the creators on those instances who previously lived mainly on ad revenue or who want to monetize themselves on the platform. Centralized platforms for video take away many of these issues, or make them a ton easier to handle. They allow for easily setting up a subscription based service such as Nebula that the creators know they will be able to at least count on being steady. It may or may not be a lot, but it’s something guaranteed without the creators themselves also having to worry about paying out in server costs, which is still more in income than FreeTube can offer. What would a creator prefer, some guaranteed income with only their video production costs as overhead, or no guarantee of income while bearing both production and hosting costs?
tal@lemmy.today 6 months ago
Do you mean PeerTube?
FreeTube seems to be an open-source client for YouTube.
Grangle1@lemm.ee 6 months ago
Yeah, thanks for the catch. That is what I mean. FreeTube is great, I use it on my PC.
woelkchen@lemmy.world 6 months ago
sandman@lemmy.ca 6 months ago
No it doesn’t.
Take your own advice.