-
3 votes
-
Natalie Wynn: The stylish socialist who is trying to save YouTube from alt-right domination
32 votes -
Navy training video - Mechanical computers [1953]
6 votes -
On YouTube and EU Article 13
If you've been following tech news somewhat recently, you've surely heard about Article 13- the one where the EU essentially requires all content hosts to have extremely strict copyright checking...
If you've been following tech news somewhat recently, you've surely heard about Article 13- the one where the EU essentially requires all content hosts to have extremely strict copyright checking tools and have automated takedown of any potentially copyrighted works.
That got put on the backburner for a little bit, but now it's back with a vote being held in early 2019.
YouTube, being one of, if not the largest content hosts in the world, is greatly affected by this motion. In fact, they have a whole website designed to encourage their creators to talk about A13 in their videos. The page very subtly hints at massive service changes that will happen in the EU if this actually ends up passing.
The CEO of YouTube, Susan Wojcicki, has also written an op-ed for Financial times (linked to official YT blog since it's free there) about the issues facing YT if A13 passes.
I haven't heard anything from official sources, but I've heard on the rumor mill that YouTube will completely suspend creators in the EU, not allowing them to upload any content, and potentially even removing their existing content from YouTube.
What if this passes? YouTube is one of the biggest sources of free knowledge and entertainment we have today, and it's become engrained into the internet as it is today.
With all this, I simply ask, "what's next?"
9 votes -
Alcatel 1X - A $99 phone that’s actually usable
6 votes -
Binary skin - Exploring Japan’s virtual YouTuber phenomenon
5 votes -
RED Hydrogen One review: I wanted this to be great! (MKBHD)
5 votes -
Homeland Security fell for YouTube videos about ‘Antifa Civil War’
9 votes -
Watch everyone pick the iPhone XR over a 1080p screen
9 votes -
The Facebook dilemma, part one
8 votes -
Tim Cook's keynote address at the 40th International Conference of Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners
8 votes -
UpTown Spot
5 votes -
VC folks talk about social media, community, and the failings - includes ex-product head of YouTube
3 votes -
Boston Dynamics' humanoid robot Atlas does parkour
18 votes -
EEVBlog looks at the method used to shred the Banksy Artwork
5 votes -
Raised by YouTube - The platform’s entertainment for children is weirder—and more globalized—than adults could have expected
11 votes -
OPPO Find X review: Are phones only about Style now? - LinusTechTips
9 votes -
The real reason Google made Android
13 votes -
iPhone Xs max durability test
3 votes -
“The iPhone XR is depressing” — UnboxTherapy. TLDR: It has a low screen resolution only to artificially make it less premium than the iPhones XS and XS Max, to compel people to buy these two, instead.
22 votes -
Facebook
7 votes -
NCIX data breach - The WAN Show Sept 21, 2018
7 votes -
Political extremists are using YouTube to monetize their toxic ideas
26 votes -
Scott Galloway's presentation from Monday at Recode's Code Commerce conference
5 votes -
Ink cartridges are a scam
18 votes -
An open source CPU
6 votes -
TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2018 Live 8/5-8/7
2 votes -
YouTube, Netflix videos found to be slowed by wireless carriers
20 votes -
A robot shoots me when I get shot in Fortnite
11 votes -
DeepMind's AI takes an IQ test
5 votes -
Back streets of the Internet
2 votes -
YouTube deletes Alex Jones' channel for violating its community guidelines
46 votes -
Telsa unveils internally developed neural network accelerator chip and drop in replacement for existing Nvidia solution
4 votes -
How Facebook is undermining democracy - Prof. Siva Vaidhyanathan
5 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
6 votes -
Google said to deliberately make YouTube slower on Microsoft Edge, Firefox
35 votes -
Asus ROG phone impressions
6 votes -
The rise of digital dictatorships - Prof. Yuval Noah Harari
5 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
6 votes -
Hooktube is dead
Hooktube.com used to provide a private way to view youtube vids, blocking ads, bypassing region locks, and also pulling comments and search results via the api. All you had to do was replace the...
Hooktube.com used to provide a private way to view youtube vids, blocking ads, bypassing region locks, and also pulling comments and search results via the api. All you had to do was replace the you in a youtube link with hook.
No more. On July 11, this appeared on the changelog:
HookTube no longer uses YouTube api for anything, and most features (channel page, search, related videos, etc) are gone. No choice.
Which was extremely bad, but at least you could still watch videos privately right?
July 16: YouTube api features are back but mp4 <video> is replaced with the standard YT video embed. HookTube is now effectively just a light-weight version of youtube and useless to the 90% of you primarily concerned with denying Google data and seeing videos blocked by your governments.
rest in pieces
It was a good run, 1.5 years. Started as a quickly made addition to the norbot project, and within long the server had to be upgraded several times. Of course YouTube Legal was an inevitability at that point.
Special thanks to the many people who created plugins and extensions for hooktube, /g/, the five people who donated anonymously, and BitChute for working hard on a real YouTube alternative. HookTube will remain operational in the present state for those who only needed it for performance reasons. See you in the next project.:(
Alternatives include: invidio.us, youtube-dl, the Freetube desktop app, Newpipe for Android, and
you’re doomed if you use iOS.ETA: Actually, I just remembered, there’s Media Grabber for the Workflow app. And Invidio mostly works on mobile.15 votes -
Women making science videos on YouTube face hostile comments
11 votes -
Intellectual dark web psyop [part 1]
5 votes -
YouTube and Facebook could escape billions in copyright payouts after EU vote. Lawmakers reject overhaul of rules which aimed to make tech giant's pay a bigger share.
2 votes -
YouTube introduces paid channel memberships and merchandising options for creators
23 votes -
Interposers, chiplets and... butterdonuts?
4 votes -
Disney Imagineering's robot stunt doubles
5 votes -
Building a Camera That Can See Wifi | Radio Telescope V2 - Part 3 SUCCESS!
14 votes -
YouTube faces paying billions to music stars after copyright vote
6 votes -
YouTube faces paying billions to music stars after copyright vote
1 vote -
YouTube blocks MIT OpenWare and Blender videos, asks for monetization agreement
18 votes