YouTube Video Stats, Sharing, and 2007 Re-Mixed 47
destinyland writes "YouTube's most popular videos in 2007 were a bunch of major label music videos, and YouTube is scrambling to re-assure the net roots community with an alternate list of 2007's "Most Memorable" videos. 'The rankings, released by YouTube on Thursday, took into account the most shared, most discussed, top rated and general popularity of clips...' One article argues that the real trend in 2007 was viral re-mixes of the original viral videos. 'In 2007 the viral video stars spawned their own wave of counter-memes, proving once again that the internet moves in mysterious ways.'"
Parent is MyMiniCity spam. (Score:2, Informative)
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Parent is spammed troll link, notice is relevant. (Score:1)
(coincidentally the captcha is alerted)
YouTube needs an "off-topic/deceptive" flag (Score:5, Insightful)
YouTube needs some kind of flagging system:
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Why wait for YouTube?
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What's nice about youtube is any clip can become popular. It's a very democratic system. Contrast this with the big media distribution system we've suffered all these years (aka television) where other people decided what was good for us.
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0. Clip is dumb arse retard cr*p suitable only for "Duh. Heh. Heh. Duh." mentalities.
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These Videos Cost Youtube Money (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting but limited. (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem with any network stats-derived list is that you can't count unique individuals. Multiple users may share an IP address. A given user may have multiple IP addresses. What's worse is that if you count page hits, rather than visitors, you end up counting the same people multiple times. Or are they people? Maybe some/all are scripts. It's not like there's a shortage of scripts for pulling YouTube content, and I'm sure the RIAA/MPAA lawyers have bots which search for keywords that may be of interest. They usually do.
Besides which, I'd far prefer one decent copy of Bill Baggs' videos to be up there, and maybe some of the rarer broadcast sci-fi, such as The Changes or Doomwatch, where efforts to make them available legally are either derisory or non-existent. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of copies of the same music video in many cases. People should be able to enjoy music, sure, but what possible benefit is there to having so many identical versions? Greater diversity of content would benefit more people and increase the value of the service as a whole.
(I'm sure the RIAA and MPAA would prefer no copies at all, but that's not going to happen and it wouldn't be good for it to happen. That being said, YouTube needs to be more than about those two - their egos or their products.)
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There is hardly a point in making lists if they are not based on something tangible, like a hitrate. Otherwise you'd get the "Youtube Arbitrary-100 of Videos of 2007".
People are voting by where they browse and, unless you're suggesting there is doctoring of numbers going on (wouldn't be surprised if it were the case), I doubt there is external interference going on eg: by multiple viewing by a single user having any significance.
Also, it's all just marketing. People who haven't visited Youtube in a while wi
Plurality vs Majority (Score:2)
Links to videos (Score:5, Informative)
Obama Girl: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKsoXHYICqU [youtube.com]
Leave Britney Alone: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kHmvkRoEowc [youtube.com]
Battle at Kruger: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LU8DDYz68kM [youtube.com]
Esmee Denters sings Justin Timberlake: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=69Grnh7Qin8 [youtube.com]
Chocolate Rain: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwTZ2xpQwpA [youtube.com]
Nora the Cat plays piano: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZ860P4iTaM [youtube.com]
Otters holding hands: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epUk3T2Kfno [youtube.com]
Re:Links to videos (Score:4, Interesting)
What the article doesn't seem to cover is people like Marie Digby [mashable.com], who was being portrayed as just a girl singing some song who did good and got a record deal (like Esmee Denters) when in fact it was a media campaign by her record company Hollywood Records (a Disney company) to get her known and selling albums.
The fact is: the big record companies are finding ways to utilize YouTube just like they've utilized radio and MTV.
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major labels never learn (Score:5, Interesting)
But I wonder why the labels are not embracing youtube more. It seems like the same mistake with MTV in the mid 80's. This was a good time for the music industry. CDs had people paying again for music they already owned, and MTV was pushing the music without huge expense to the labels. Sure the labels had to produce the videos, but that was, of course, mostly at the artists expense. This reversed a downhill slide in music sales. Extrapolating from the late 70's sales, it is likely that current sales would be about half of what they are, and only about half the people would be buying.
What is also correlated is that as soon as MTV became less music and more television, the sales growth tapered off. Now did MTV change formats because the saw the labels could no longer push a compelling product, or did the lack of major label cooperation lead to MTV to change formats and end the cheap advertising for the labels? Who knows.
What is clear is that this decline decreased coincidently with introduction of iTunes and the iPod, and we if believe that MTV made a difference, we can see how things like YouTube might be cheap advertising as well. I have read stuff suggesting that a larger percentage of the population buy music now than ever before. I don't know if that is true. Sure they may spend less per person, but perhaps what the labels should do is concentrate more on populous advertising, rather than trying to extract ever more money out of each customers, which will only lead to the problems of the late 70's where they have few customers that are willing be so extremely monetized.
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Monkeyballs (Score:1)
(No link to Youtube version, since they lamely require registration first...)
Link: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8572086082639363544&q=monkeyballs&total=584&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0 [google.com]
I'm Confused (Score:2)
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people here at slashdot DO say that people here at slashdot don't like the 'product' the the Major Labels 'produce'. Most people are not readers of slashdot. most people are also idiots. most people on slashdot are not.
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most people are also idiots. most people on slashdot are not.
I'd love to see a poll being conducted on this site asking how many people on this site think so. Funnily enough I for one think that most people are not idiots, except the most people on Slashdot.
Is it just me...? (Score:1, Insightful)
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If it helps, I'm still working on the "net roots community" reference. I used to be big reggae fan, but that was years ago.
well... (Score:2)
Youtube is the new MTV & VH1 (Score:2)