I mean, I dont actually mind ads… within reason. But over the past few years I have watched less and less youtube content due to the ratio of ads to the actual bloody content I wanted to view.

One recent video about a bloke’s guitar amp was great. The ads not so much. I had to view two lots of 30 second unskippable ads before the 9 minute video would start. The guy starts this amazing guitar solo half way through, only to be cut off by TWO MORE bleeding adverts. The solo continues, the guy shreds it out then the video ends… two more adverts, 30 seconds each no skips (I reloaded the browser in the end which seemed to trigger a 2 minute ad at the start of another video).

Use Piped I hear you cry. Great idea. But how long is that going to last? I am certain that youtube and their parent company are feverishly pushing their engineers to find ways through, around, over and under any tool that stops them making money. The real solution is to tell everyone we know to use other platforms as much as possible and avoid Youtube. Tell every creator we love and respect to diversify where their content goes.

I know people here dont like the politics and trolling that happen on other platforms but thats because they’re insulated. With more exposure those platforms will tackle it. Or quarantine it. The other danger is if we dont diversify our viewing and creator hosting then Alphabet will just hold a monopoly and strangle any other real chance.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Nah, most people don’t give a fuck. If the method of bypassing ads gets too intricate, they’ll cave.

    Seriously, the vast majority of people just let the ads run, or even watch them. They’re either unconcerned, or lazy, sometimes both.

    • ManosTheHandsOfFate@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      We’ve tasted ad-less video entertainment and found it good. That said, for at least half a century OTA network TV required watching ads and most people didn’t care much because they didn’t have to pay cash for the service. I think many/most people have the capacity to tolerate ads to get what they want.

      • ElectroNeutrino@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think it’s less to do with the fact that ads exist, and more to do with how intrusive they are. Early YouTube ads were pretty tame compared to the ones today, especially when it was just banner ads.

      • Fondots@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        No commercials was once one of the big selling points for cable, and we know how that turned out

        • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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          Except that’s a myth and never happened. TV on all its forms had ads immediately as it appeared, because it was the same concept as radio: when you have a captive audience waiting to get the programming in order, you can insert anything you want.

          Cable promised higher quality programming, exclusive access, higher quality image etc. but never no ads. Sounds familiar?

          • ManosTheHandsOfFate@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yes, and interestingly the earliest cable TV in the US was built to relay broadcast channels to valleys where the signal wouldn’t otherwise reach.

          • Pregnenolone@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            In Australia there were laws preventing our cable provider from showing ads in the first two years. Now they can show ads but cannot earn more than 50% revenue from ads.

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        That’s neither here nor there. What I think is ad glut, and what you think is ad glut, dude doesn’t have anything to do with the majority of YouTube users, which is what has to be inconvenienced enough for it to disrupt their business, which is what I thought your post was about

    • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Their adblock blocker doesn’t work in incognito mode. The overlay and whatnot just will not populate if you use an incognito browser window. You have to sign in every time you open a new tab, but this has been working fine for me on Firefox.

  • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve have premium because of YT music (formerly Google Play Music) which imo is the best music streaming service. I have the family plan that is me my wife, and three friends, the friend paying their portion of plan.

    I like giving money to Google less and less by the day, but I don’t mind paying for an ad free service that I use extensively. If they start putting ads in the paid service, I will be dropping immediately.

    • thanevim@kbin.social
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      I’ve been subscribed to the same family plan, since about 2014ish. I like it, but really don’t appreciate that they raised the price for basically fuck all. Only reason I haven’t canceled it is that creators I watch on YouTube get far more from me as a Premium user than ad-based viewership

    • ToeNailClippings@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Netflix and Disney are threatening ads in their paid services, with maybe a higher priced tier to then avoid them. I think this is the model streaming is going for now.

    • Odiorne@lemmy.world
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      Yup, same for me. I had Ublock for youtube on my computer, but couldn’t figure out how to block ads on the tv. Since I was already paying for another music service, it made sense to just drop that and pay essentially the same price for ad free youtube and a good music streaming service.

  • missingno@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Youtube has a captive audience that isn’t going anywhere. The platform is too big to die, and too expensive for any challenger to seriously threaten it. And the only users they stand to lose with this move are the users who are costing them money, they don’t care if adblock users leave as long as they keep everyone else.

    • ToeNailClippings@lemmy.worldOP
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      Its interesting. You talk to my generation and older and they see the ads as invasive. They grew up with less because of TV. And it wasnt really targetted/personalised like internet ads. Younger people, say mid 20s and under dont realise how many ads those are. I reminds me of the rights people lose over the years because people werent educated on matters.

      • orion2145@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        TV? The platform that basically is one giant ad? This is the most confusing comment.

        • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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          Depends what country you’re from. Here in Australia there are ad free channels, and ad supported channels that have a reasonable amount (for example, watching sports you might see a few ads at half time when the players are resting… but that’s also when I get up to take a break from the TV myself…)

          There’s probably TV here that has more ads, but you don’t have to watch those.

          • orion2145@lemmy.world
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            Yea makes sense. Network and cable TV in the US is and always has been about 50/50 ads to content. It’s horrendous to watch. And probably explains why some sizable number of Americans will always pay to go ad free if it’s an option.

            Edit: and not be too concerned about a 10s bumper ad or two. Altho don’t get wrong they are increasingly obnoxious.

  • moldyringwald@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I don’t think it will make enough of an impact for Alphabet to actually give a shit but I agree they’re getting out of control with the ads and I think a handful of people will start looking for alternatives. I recently switched from Google to Kagi and I set up Firefox to redirect all YouTube links to Piped lol I think a lot of people are already trying to find alternatives to Google products due to general enshittification but they’re so big I don’t really see it hurting them in any significant way. I would love to see something actually compete with YouTube though tbh. I personally try to use non Google alternatives whenever possible these days

  • Jamie@jamie.moe
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    For as long as people have complained about YouTube ads even before they started the crackdown, I don’t think it’ll matter. Tons of people didn’t block them even before the option went away.

    Personally, I bit the bullet and got Premium last year because I didn’t feel like maintaining a DNS solution on my wifi and like using my TV for it. YouTube is basically the main form of “TV” that I watch when I’m in a couch potato mood. Most actual TV shows that come out aren’t interesting to me.

    I’m not really advocating everyone just go buy premium. Even in my case I’m not jumping up and down to give Google my money by any means. But for my situation it’s an expense that I justify for myself

    • dalë@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      YT Premium is not available in my location and, as yet, adblock still working fine.

      When they catch up with my location I’ll use either revanced or LibreTube.

    • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      Tons of people didn’t block them even before the option went away.

      Excellent point.

      Those of us that adblock are probably a single digit percent of their total traffic.

      They just don’t want that to increase.

  • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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    It’s possible this could begin a regulatory shitstorm. They may realize they’re tempting fate with how hard they’re pushing for profit in bullshit, unethical, sketchy ways.

    Then again, some quant will probably walk into the room and present a business plan for regulatory capture of the EU and US and the long term profit that would yield, so they’ll definitely go that route.

  • gian @lemmy.grys.it
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    1 year ago

    The assumpion Google is doing is that people install AdBlockes because they want something free. They seems not to be able to understand that they simply gone too far.

    Google had the problem that they must show a ever growing revenue and since they cannot add more eyeball (or data to harvest) they simply need to try to get more from what they had. So as you say, the problem is not the single Ad, or the data harvest or any other single thing they do.
    The problem is the sum of all of the things they do. They show multiple Ads, harvest your data, make you pay and still harvest your data and show the Ads.

    People simply started to think “since Google want to screw me, then why I should not try to screw them ?”

    Use Piped I hear you cry. Great idea. But how long is that going to last? I am certain that youtube and their parent company are feverishly pushing their engineers to find ways through, around, over and under any tool that stops them making money.

    It will became the usual armed race, until Google would make their services so disfunctional to even the common user that people will simply stop using them since the value they get from the service is not worth the trouble.

    That assuming that in some places (the EU for example) Google would not be hit by some law that force them to stop what they are doing and force them to play by the rules everyone else need to follow.

  • Sparhawk87@lemmynsfw.com
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    1 year ago

    If YouTube ads were like the ads on Pornhub, 30 seconds long and skippable after 5 seconds, I would be OK with ads these 1min at beginning and same in the middle for a 10min video is just ridiculous.

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    1 year ago

    Honestly, I would be fine with it, if they slashed the price of YT premium by about 60%.

    Right now the cost of an individual YT premium membership is about 150SEK/Month, that is far too high.

    I watch a LOT of YT on my commute, and I would be fine with paying 60-70SEK/Month.

    In some regions the cost of an individual membership is the equivalent of about 20SEK/Month, so it is profitable even at those prices.

    • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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      1 year ago

      They really should unbundle YouTube Music or make a plan that’s for people that want nothing more than ad-free, and make that tier basically about how much they got from serving you ads.

      They’re trying too hard to sell Premium as having all of those perks and extras that not everyone wants.

      • stoy@lemmy.zip
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, YT music is of no interest to me, so that sounds like a brilliant idea

      • DV8@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They explicitly slashed that plan before they started going hard against adblocking. They were running tests with premium light which costed about €6 a month. It was basically all I wanted. But they sent a mail this tier was going away at literally the same time I read they started hard locking anyone using uBlock. (Which I still used with Premium Light to block out all the shorts bullshit)

    • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Honestly, I would be fine with it, if they slashed the price of YT premium by about 60%.

      Here in Australia they just announced they’re about to increase prices by about 60%… new prices is equivalent to 235 SEK / month (that is for a family plan… but the family plan is the best deal - then you can at least share the cost between people).

  • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It will hurt them a little bit, because it will drive a few people to alternative platforms. However, the majority of their user base is now captive, because they have grown dependent on Alphabet for a number of services. All they have to do is ban a few people from all of Alphabet to set the example, and then 99% of folks will either subscribe or disable their ad blockers. Because getting banned from all of their services would really, really suck for most people who depend on them. Just think of how many non-Alphabet logins would suddenly stop working (either because of federation or gmail dependencies). Not to mention their data saved to the cloud.

    Unfortunately, big picture is, they will come out on top. Because of the “embrace, extend, and extinguish” model that they are veterans at. IOW, they know how to royally screw people.

    I think our only glimmer of hope is the government continuing to go after monopolies. That’s not much of a hope, though.

    • gian @lemmy.grys.it
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      All they have to do is ban a few people from all of Alphabet to set the example, and then 99% of folks will either subscribe or disable their ad blockers.

      It can be like you said or, on the other hand, be the trigger to even more people to seek for alternatives.

      Because getting banned from all of their services would really, really suck for most people who depend on them.

      While true, fighting with your own clients/source of income is not a very brilliant strategy for a company. People that depend on them for serious reasons can simply decide that the risk is becoming too high and simply seek other solutions. All the SCO saga should have taught something…

      Unfortunately, big picture is, they will come out on top. Because of the “embrace, extend, and extinguish” model that they are veterans at. IOW, they know how to royally screw people.

      Maybe Google can win this battle, but I am not sure about the war. If the data that show that about 42% of the internet users had an AdBlocker installed are true, it remain to be seen how many of them will accept the condition Google set.

      At this point is clear that the use of AdBlockers is hurting them in a way or another and while user may find an alternative solution for Google services, Google cannot find an alternative users for its services. In the end Google lose even if they only show a slower grow then predicted.

      • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You are more optimistic than I am, and I hope you are right. I am mildly encouraged by some of the backlash we’re seeing in the news against tech bros.

        • gian @lemmy.grys.it
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          You are more optimistic than I am, and I hope you are right. I am mildly encouraged by some of the backlash we’re seeing in the news against tech bros.

          Nah, maybe I am just older and already seen this happening, and not only in tech.

          The problem Google has is that they are on the edge: they need to fight adblockers but they cannot hurt too much the average user while the adblock users already shown that they accept to “go to war”. And I don’t think that Google has more resources than “us”.

          There is only so much ops a normal user accept to be able to use a service, they cannot take it too far to become an inconvenient to the average users. This way they simply will lose even the normal user.

          A good parallel I do looking at myself is with Amazon, my orders hystory shows that when I started to use it I made much more orders, then in time Amazon got worse: cheap chinese clones, amazon ripoffs, query that shows irrelevant products, more and more difficulties to find the right product even if queried with the correct full name, so I simply switched to other online shops when I need to buy a certain brand product and not a cheap ripoff. So Amazon lost about 80% of my orders.

          Same for Youtube: if while fighting against the adblockers they make the service worse even for the “average Joe” they will lose users and relevance.

    • Auli@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      How well it hurt them? It well probably help them the people it drives away well be the ones who are blocking ads. So by moving to another platform you are saving on Youtubes costs.