Google and YouTube Continue To Struggle With Details 52
An SFGate article looks at the still rocky road that Google and YouTube are traveling as they try to iron out after-merger details. Hanging in the air are things like the Viacom takedown request, competition from Joost, and deal-making with organizations like the NBA and BBC. They're also concerned about little things like, you know, making money. From the article: "Tensions [with IP holders] haven't reached lawsuit status -- yet. Such a fight could be long and costly, but with Google's backing, YouTube could afford it. And that may be why media companies have held back so far, [IP lawyer Lee] Bromberg and others said. Google and YouTube have something to gain from deal-making, too. For the company to make money from advertising -- and the potential is huge, with an estimated $70 billion to $80 billion spent in television advertising -- Google and YouTube need the premium videos. Because viewers are more likely to watch these clips than myriad user-generated ones, advertisers are willing to pay more for them. "
The internet is for... (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Spin off an "adult" section of YouTube.
2) ???
3) Profit
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Re:The internet is for... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Competition from Joost? (Score:5, Interesting)
The deal between Viacom and Joost is like when that beautiful cheerleader, after breaking up with the handsome quarterback, chases him and says "I'd rather to sleep with the first idiot that passes by me that going back to you". And picks up the first idiot that passes by her. And gives him a big sloppy kiss.
That "first idiot" is Joost. Everybody knows that Viacom end up ironing a deal with Google, and that they will be back in bed soon, so, no need to give him false hope.
Joost is overhyped too early (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course when it fails everyone will say online TV is dead. And then Apple will do it right.
Also, I dont see why Joost is so vehemently against user generated content
Will they allow linking to channels/tv show scenes from the web like youtube style?
Can afford it? (Score:1)
The article's notion of 'afford' is odd: just because Google (and therefore YouTube) has money doesn't mean they can afford to blow it on lawsuits. Youtube needs to increase in profitability by 1000 fold in order for Google to make any profit on it at all. Google cannot afford YouTube as it is today, let alone with huge lawsuits to deal with.
I can't use Joost (Score:2)
And I'm sure a lot of other people are going to find out the same thing. With my Vonage service, any peer-to-peer application results in poor sound quality thanks to the ridiculous upload speeds Comcast provides. And I'm sure it's just as bad using any other VoIP provider. I've had to use a cron job just to make sure BitTorrent doesn't gum up my phone service.
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That's why they're doing this viral marketing piece for Slashdot.
Let's first of all find out what people watch (Score:2, Insightful)
I doubt that many would want to
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Picture quality is not, in and of itself, the real issue. There are some very interesting multi-part videos (off the top of my head: Cobbler and the Thief "director's cut") that, yes they take a while to view and the quality is low, but it is still the only place where you'll find that
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I've watched Youtube videos that were upwards of an 1.5 hours long. Mostly they're lectures that I wouldn't have seen otherwise. Also, I've downloaded several videos from Google Video to view on my iPod. Even blown up on my 32" TV they're perfectly adequate for communicating the message.
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YT videos are usually of poor quality.
There are numerous ways youtube can actually generate a profit with this one little fact. Off the top of my head:
1) Offer higher-quality video services to paying viewers.
2) Offer higher-quality video services to paying uploaders.
3) Offer higher-quality video services on a per-video basis to uploaders.
Google is primarily a search company who makes money on advertisements based on search. Text ads based on video content based on description and tags is a start, but tagging has to be much better before this p
no subject (Score:3, Interesting)
google/youtube just simply needs to get more tv networks and whatnot onboard. But the deal maker is to get ALL music videos online, not just current "hip" ones that the kids are watching today but as many as possible.
Replays of old tv shows would be great, even current tv shows could make a deal that youtube could have their shows a week or two later, kind of the same setup sendmail has, actual tv viewers get the latest, but computer tv viewers have to wait. So tv networks don't lose their audience if they decide to go online because the stuff online wouldn't be the latest episodes.
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IIRC,
Gen X designated thoses people who grew up under the Baby Boomers and a sterotype of a lack(ed) a foundation of belief in the values of the past along with a poor outlook on what the future brings.
Gen Y designs thoses who came after Gen X and stood for _Generation Why?_ and marked the end of the Baby Boomers or the start of the future with them growing up with computers and o
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thanks.
They're still thinking in the old paradigm. (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't the myriad the point? YOUtube, and not THEIRtube? It appears to me this is an attempt to finally define the internet's replacement for television, since past attempts to hybridize (WebTV, for example) have failed to become accepted as widely as the entertainment industry would like.
If They were paying attention, they would realize that you need to advertise evenly. It doesn't matter if someone's watching the second episode of Who's the Boss or three fat kids on a webcam lip-syncing to The Safety Dance, someone is watching a video, give them an ad. Selling ads specifically on a given video is TV-era thinking. This is the mighty internet tube system, it doesn't work the same way.
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The point of advertising is to influence someone to buy a product. There was a day in television advertising when they did what you are proposing - when there were three networks. Even then you did audience segmentation by the type of audience a particular television show had and showed ads that might be of interest to that audience. There is a reason "soap operas" are called soap operas and TV was the center piece of so-called mass media. You are right, this is a different approach, but you are essentially
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Yeah, in the internet era, you blow a bunch of money giving a free video-hosting service to teens and young adults that they use to do share vids with their friends and have no clue how you intend to profit.
Seriously, how long until Google has to cut off this gangrenous arm?
Oh, by the way, I think the counterpart to YouTube is TheyTube, not TheirTube.
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In as much as I appreciate you're comment, I suspect the proper way to spell that service would be They'reTube.
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No, this is business. Maybe YOUtube used to be the point, but no longer -- I think perhaps "MYtube full o' money" has been the point all along.
How so? This isn't about the internet "routing around" videos with ads appended -- this is about getting advertisers to pay Google top dollar for getting their content out there.
Such is the end of cool things... (Score:3, Insightful)
YouTube is about your content fuckers (Score:2, Insightful)
Thats a a load of bullshit. If YouTube does that, it isn't YouTube anymore. remember,"broadcast yourself". Whoever this analyst is, either he is paid by those studios or doesn't understand the point of YouTube. Its FUD against YouTube, which is a excellent thing in itself(YouTube not the FUD),whether you like it or not.
I don't know from where all those statistcs people pull tha
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Break IP strangle-hold (Score:1)
A new thought. (Score:1)
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Google is making deals with companies in an effort to own the videos users are uploading. This commercialization of the internet industry will act to reduce the quality of content manufactured, and develop an environment that discourages creativity and of course, thought of any kind, itself.
For example of privitization look at public turned corporate schools. Look at the effort been made in universities, to become more dependant institutions.
No, they don't (Score:3, Insightful)
The world in general needs to break the addictive, destructive relationship with the "premium content" providers. Google would do the public a far greater service if it simply put ads in the user-made vids, (assuming it absolutely has to, of course) and avoided forming any type of relationship with big media entirely.
The film companies and record labels need to be sent a message that they cannot indefinitely push the viewing public around, bully them, sue them, and otherwise treat them like cattle, without there being deeply negative consequences for them. If someone becomes willing to do this, big media might start treating people a bit better.
ah, my daily motion (Score:1)
1. having an unfortunate name that conjurs scatalogical images.
2. being partly in some kind of 'code' language known as "French"
3. You probably couldn't sue them for that much
youtube's problem..... (Score:2)
That is where they need to go. they compress the youtube content so hard even incredibly good looking videos end up looking crappy on youtube. at least others are offering higher quality options.
and yes, most people dont care if their video content get's downloaded as can be seen with the amount of content on veoh.
I love the "babe in the woods" perspective... (Score:3, Interesting)
No shit - you're saying that professionals in the TV and movie industries generally crank out better stuff that amateurs? And you're wondering why the companies that bankrolled the professionals so they could sell advertising inserted into the professionals' final product are getting annoyed that a competing company is copying the content and putting its own advertising on it? If that last bit's a mystery to you, I'm not sure I can help.
Generally, I think of YouTube as the next generation of "America's Funniest Home Videos". Entertaining? A little. $X billion entertaining? Dunno. Going to replace my viewing of DVDs and a handful of TV shows on cable? No.
This is where I get worried about where Google is headed. At its core, it's not really a tech company; it's a media and advertising company. Its "consumer product" is a search engine and now YouTube, but it doesn't really have any "premium content" or service that serves a unique need or performs it in a unique manner.
Perhaps this is strategy? (Score:2)