• tuckerm@supermeter.social
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    5 months ago

    This may not work out the way I want it to, but I’m actually a little excited about these tech companies making a bunch of anti-consumer decisions all at once. So many mainstream users will be looking for alternatives, and it’s going to provide a great opportunity for non-profit open source projects. It’s already happening with the fediverse suddenly becoming a viable place for discussion in the last 1.5 years. After Windows Recall was announced, I’ve seen more people talking about switching to Linux than ever before. Part of me can’t wait for unskippable Youtube ads.

    • t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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      5 months ago

      People often decry accelerationism, but the reality is that the slow-boiled frog is the one that sits and dies. Chipping away at freedoms, consumer protections, product benefits, etc is all less likely to spark backlash than when they drop sharply in a short time.

      That doesn’t mean you should help to make things worse, but it does mean that you may want to reconsider constantly mitigating every bad thing that others are doing, rather than letting them shoot themselves in the foot. When people are being hurt, help them. When people are being inconvenienced, let them get angry.

      • noobdoomguy8658@feddit.de
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        5 months ago

        This looks like a very classical and well-known case of executives copying each other.

        That other company is doing layoffs and seems fine? Reports the line going up? Let’s do it, too!

        The guys across the street are already implementing AI? Investors love it? Let do it, too! We may have taken a risk with blockchain, but this one is just sure to work better for us!

        The big name is going for the money, predator-style, and they’re still afloat? Finally, we can cash out, too!

    • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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      5 months ago

      We need Cory to coin a term for what comes after enhittification. Perhaps we can call it the Great Wipening, where we all stop paying to be treated like serfs and start taking back control of our content and data.

      • prole@beehaw.org
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        5 months ago

        No we don’t, we have 400+ years of capitalist history to tell us what comes next; Oligarchy, neo-feudalism…

        People: Cory Doctorow didn’t invent this concept. Read a book.

        • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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          4 months ago

          The whole point of this particular comment thread here is that we’re already starting to see what’s happening: people are taking back control. You’re here on Lemmy, proving that exact point.

          I never said we needed Cory to tell us what comes next. Just come up with another colourfully descriptive term like he did with enshittification.

          You sound like that insufferable ponytail from Good Will Hunting.

      • renard_roux@beehaw.org
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        5 months ago

        You missed an S in enShittification.

        And I completely agree, Cory seems to be good at coining terms and making them stick 👍

    • null@slrpnk.net
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      5 months ago

      After Windows Recall was announced, I’ve seen more people talking about switching to Linux than ever before.

      I’ve been the Linux zealot in my friend group for years, and none of them have switched (they’ve dabbled on old laptops but never daily drove).

      With Recall, a coworker I never would have expected reached out to me because he knows I’m a “Linux guy” and he was switching to Linux over it.

      He’s still daily driving pop_OS a month later.

      • Pete Hahnloser@beehaw.orgOP
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        4 months ago

        This is an underrepresented viewpoint. We are at the point of “find out,” which so many tech companies thought they could stay just to the other side of the line on. Thing is, you can only move the goalposts so often before they’re in someone’s yard, and they didn’t sign up for this shit.

        It was OneDrive upgrade nagging that made me switch to Linux. Microsoft could have, you know, not done that and kept a user. They also could have not gone regressive with how the taskbar functions. Or any number of other things that were dismissive of users.

        At a certain point, you’re sitting in ever warmer water in the pot, and it occurs that maybe you’re being turned into food. That’s when the Linux pots start looking appealing. This was a completely avoidable problem brought to you by greed.

        Greed! Because we don’t think making a good product is what capitalism is about.

  • Feyter@programming.dev
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    5 months ago

    Of course they do. They want to keep control over monetization. They don’t care about creators at all.

  • smeg@feddit.uk
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    5 months ago

    TL;DW: the ads will be in the video stream itself which will mess up timestamps, sponsor block uses timestamps to know when the ads are.

    Seems to me that this will also break every other use case of specific times like direct linking to a timestamp of a video, right?

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      5 months ago

      This sucks for so many. People use timestamps for content warnings or to help viewers avoid spoilers. Commenters use timestamps when talking about the content of the video. It’s insane to change this once it’s so ingrained in how people use the website.

      • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        It’s also how content creators literally create chapters: put the time codes into the video description

        That’s a native feature of the platform

      • smeg@feddit.uk
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        5 months ago

        Hopefully they’ll realise it’s a bigger breaking change than they wanted as part of this testing phase

          • smeg@feddit.uk
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            5 months ago

            Yeah I do. They still want to be able to sell their premium subscriptions and not every engineer working on the product is some soulless corpo. If they can break all adblockers without damaging their product they will, but if it fucks things up too much then they’ll go back to the drawing board and try something else.

    • Ænima@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      I’d imagine YouTube subtracts the ad length from posted timestamps when clicking a link containing one. But we are taking about Google, soooooo…

        • Ænima@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          In the cat and mouse game, the cat can adjust tactics but the mice eventually figure out an alternative route. I’m sure they will find a way with this. Either that or a lot of people will just stop watching YouTube, I’d imagine.

          • ahornsirup@sopuli.xyz
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            5 months ago

            A truly shocking number of people don’t use any form of adblock. I doubt that driving off the adblock users will have a significant effect on viewership (and even if it does, why would Google care, it’s not like we’re making them money).

            • null@slrpnk.net
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              5 months ago

              There’s also plenty of people that do use adblock today, and would just put up with ads if it stopped working.

              So the actual number of people that would simply stop using YouTube altogether is lower than the number of people that use adblock today.

              And from YouTube’s perspective, those people aren’t contributing revenue anyways, and all they get is a little bit of usage data. Easy trade.

    • prole@beehaw.org
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      5 months ago

      It will end up being like FreeVee on Prime for anyone who’s ever watched a movie or anything on there. They straight up randomly just inject ads in at random times, often not even during scene breaks. Characters are sometimes mid-sentence… Oh, and we’re back to the volume of the ads being 2x louder than the movie itself because I guess that law Congress passed way back in the day only applied to cable and broadcast TV.

      It makes it nearly unwatchable. So get ready for that experience.

    • DdCno1@beehaw.org
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      5 months ago

      Because that’s where the audience is. Peertube is deader than the lemmyverse. You are essentially making the silly “but yet you choose to live in society” argument.

        • Ænima@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          Yeah right, we all know you have a single copy of digital items and you can either put it here or there, but not both. That’s why NFTs were such a success! /s

        • saigot@lemmy.ca
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          5 months ago

          Not to be cynical, but how can you monetize peertube as a creator. Even if you are established enough to do in video sponsorships, your sponsors aren’t going to really accept views from peertube when they evaluate how much your worth. So it either does nothing or it sinks your career.

      • anachronist@midwest.social
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        5 months ago

        I mean we’re sitting here on the lemmyverse having a conversation…

        But yeah creators should upload to peertube but they won’t get any meaningful viewership there. The only way to break the network affect stranglehold google/youtube has over video content on the internet is making sure that if you do produce that content it’s available via other channels.

        • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemm.ee
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          4 months ago

          A service that uploads to all sites you select. All in one place. Pivot to hosting trackers and have users host their content torrent style

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        5 months ago

        You are essentially making the silly “but yet you choose to live in society” argument.

        I don’t think so. OP wasn’t saying to stop uploading to YouTube, but to upload to alternate sites as well and maybe lead their audiences there by mentioning it in videos.

      • Fitik@fedia.io
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        5 months ago

        Monetization is one of the main problem of PeerTube, it’s more expensive to make videos than to write threads, and while on YouTube/Odysee/Rumble content creators earn money, on peertube they often need to pay to instance operators to pay for hosting

        User experience for peertube is not the best too, while in the most of the Fediverse for instance to connect with other instances a user just needs to follow someone on it, on peertube instance owner needs to add instances to the list to federate their content

        • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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          5 months ago

          Just FYI the license in your comment doesn’t actually exist and the creative commons license it links to does not mention AI anywhere.

            • Kissaki@beehaw.org
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              5 months ago

              Does it apply if you don’t say that you are posting under the license? It may be implied, the intent is reasonably clear, but an argument of ambiguity can be made. You’re merely linking to a license.

              Does it apply if the link label mismatches the license? CC by-nc-sa does more than deny commercial AI training. It requires attribution, requires general non-commercial use, and requires share-alike.

              Personally, I prefer when it’s at least differently formatted to indicate it as a footer and not comment content. I’ve seen them smaller and IIRC italic on other commenters, which seems more appropriate and less distracting and noisy [for human consumption]. When the comment is no longer than the license footer… well…

              • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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                5 months ago

                Given how many comments I receive in the vein of “are you seriously licensing your comment?”, I think the intent is quite clear. But since people keep asking why, I might add a blurb (since I don’t have a page I can link to) to explain that.

                You are free to improve on the format if you like. Maybe I’ll see a comment of yours with a format I agree with and copy that formatting.

                Anti Commercial-AI license

            • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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              5 months ago

              Well i understand its to combat ai from training on your comments right, maybe also to poison the data?

              I just don’t see what taking a non relevant licensee and giving it a different name is doing to stop that. Trivial to filter stuff like this out in a dataset.

              At best an individual data scraping company decides to honor it out of kindness. At worst people think that its a real license and copy it with a false sense of security.

              • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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                5 months ago

                I think the fact that you got the point from the license name and the link fulfilled the purpose of informing the reader.

                As for AI training who knows how well they clean their data. Copilot spit out the entire GPL verbatim as well as a few other licenses and got sued. Data cleaning processes clearly vary among companies.

                But if you have an idea on how to better indicate that content is licensed at a glance, go ahead and do it.

                Anti Commercial-AI license

                • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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                  5 months ago

                  Well you could always just use the proper name. The cc license in question IS anti commercial. A great deal of ai is opens source and non commercial and to those cc is fair game. But if commercial is where you draw the line then envoking this license may do.

                  This comment is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 (Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International)

                  Calling it “anti-ai” when its not removes power from your argument. Your invoking something that does not exit and linking to something seemingly unrelated.

                  Now the bigger question i have, have had since i have seen people do this.

                  Why is there still not an actual anti-ai license? Seems obvious that there is a need for it? I dont know much about how licenses are created but it strikes me as odd.

        • Pete Hahnloser@beehaw.orgOP
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          5 months ago

          Quick reminder that you are on Beehaw. There’s only one rule here, and this sort of dismissive take does not adhere to it. Please find something substantive to dismiss.

  • Mechanize@feddit.it
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    5 months ago

    I find it funny that this is the first video where I’m consistently getting the “This helps us protect our community” and “Log in to confirm that you are not a bot” errors while using an alternative Frontend.

    I’m sure it’s just a random coincidence, but it is still funny to me.

  • JimSamtanko@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    And yet, despite everyone complaining, YouTube knows damn well no one is going to stop using their shit so they’ll continue to do whatever they want.

    Maybe people should just…. Stop using YouTube. That or don’t complain when they fuck over the content creators and users of their platform.

            • scbasteve7@lemm.ee
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              4 months ago

              If you don’t use YouTube, you’re also screwing over the content creators you enjoy. You can cause harm to a company in many ways. Stop using a site prevents them from making money off of you. Preventing them from actively making money off of you while you’re still using the site actively takes money away from them. It is double sided sword because you’re also not actively supporting that content creator. However, if they don’t have another platform to post on, you can instead buy merch, donate, or simply help the algorithm boost their content by watching their content.

              I don’t disagree with you. YouTube should no longer be a viable business. Something else should step in and rival them. But since that doesn’t look like it’s going to happen, I’ll be happy running adblocks, and letting them not recoup their server and operation costs from me.

              • JimSamtanko@lemm.ee
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                4 months ago

                Imagine if- now bear with me… seriously, Imagine if…. everyone stopped using YouTube.

          • JimSamtanko@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            So… you’ll complain about, but use it anyway thereby supporting what they’re doing.

            Gotcha.

    • Sina@beehaw.org
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      4 months ago

      I’ll just use invidious, it’s a bit of a chore to use, but it’s increasingly worth it.

  • jaschen@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    My brother in law says he likes commercials when I offered to remove it. They are over indexing this.