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YouTube

<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align:center; padding:16px 0 16px 0;">Image:Logo tagline sm.gif</td></tr>

Type Subsidiary of Google
Founded February 15, 2005
Headquarters Image:Flag of the United States.svg San Bruno, California, USA

<tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Key people</th><td>Chad Hurley, Founder & CEO
Steve Chen, Founder & CTO
Jawed Karim, Founder & Advisor</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Employees</th><td>67 (2006)</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Slogan</th><td>Broadcast Yourself</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.75em;">Website</th><td>www.youtube.com</td></tr>

YouTube is a popular free video sharing Web site which lets users upload, view, and share video clips.

Founded in February 2005 by three employees of PayPal, the San Bruno-based service utilizes Adobe Flash technology to display video. The wide variety of site content includes movie and TV clips and music videos, as well as amateur content such as videoblogging. Currently staffed by 67 employees<ref>YouTube Hires Its First CFO: Yahoo's Treasurer (September 2, 2006). Retrieved on 2006-09-09.</ref>, the company was named TIME magazine's "Invention of the Year" for 2006.<ref>TIME Best Inventions 2006 (November 7, 2006). Retrieved on 2006-11-07.</ref> In October 2006, Google, Inc., announced that it had reached a deal to acquire the company for $1.65 billion USD in Google's stock. The deal closed on 13 November 2006.<ref>"Google closes $A2b YouTube deal", Reuters, November 14, 2006.</ref>

Contents

History

YouTube.com was founded by Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim, who were all early employees of PayPal.<ref name="usatoday">Graham, Jefferson (2005-11-21). Video websites pop up, invite postings (English). USA Today. Gannett Co. Inc.. Retrieved on 2006-07-28.</ref> Prior to PayPal, Hurley studied design at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Chen and Karim studied computer science together at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.<ref name="uillinois">University of Illinois Department of Computer Science (2006). "YouTube: Sharing Digital Camera Videos"</ref> The domain name "YouTube.com" was activated on February 15, 2005,<ref>Info for YouTube.com (English). Alexa.com. Amazon.com (2006-07-26). Retrieved on 2006-07-26.</ref> and the website was developed over the following months. The creators offered the public a preview of the site in May 2005, and six months later, YouTube made its official debut.

In August of 2005, Macromedia released FlashPlayer 8, which uses On2 Technologies' VP6 video codec, providing a large increase in video quality compared to FlashPlayer 7 and had a very small download size, decreasing download time. For the first time ever, users did not have to use a separate video player, like Windows Media Player, Realplayer, or Apple's Quicktime Player. They could now watch decent video in a web page practically instantly. Without this new technology, it's unlikely YouTube would have taken off as fast as it did.

The company's humble beginnings in a garage and commitment to offering free services necessitated outside financial backing. In November of 2005, venture capital firm Sequoia Capital invested an initial $3.5 million;<ref name="forbes">Woolley, Scott. "ʝ Raw and Random", Forbes.com, Forbes, 2006-03-13. Retrieved on 2006-07-28. (in English)</ref> additionally, Roelof Botha, partner of the firm and former CFO of PayPal, joined the YouTube board of directors. In April 2006, Sequoia put an additional $8 million into the company, which had experienced a boom of popularity and growth in just its first few months.<ref name="Sequoiainvestment">Sequoia invests 11.5 million total in YouTube, accessed July 7, 2006 </ref>

At present, YouTube is one of the fastest-growing websites on the World Wide Web,<ref name="adage_fastest">"YouTube Fastest Growing Website" Advertising Age</ref> and is ranked as the 10th most popular website on Alexa, far outpacing even MySpace's growth.<ref>Info for YouTube.com (English). Alexa.com. Amazon.com (2006-07-26). Retrieved on 2006-07-26.</ref> According to a July 16 2006 survey, 100 million clips are viewed daily on YouTube, with an additional 65,000 new videos uploaded per 24 hours. The site has almost 20 million visitors each month, according to Nielsen/NetRatings,<ref name="usatoday100million">"YouTube serves up 100 million videos a day online", USA Today, Gannett Co. Inc., 2006-07-16. Retrieved on 2006-07-28. (in English)</ref> where around 44% are female, 56% male, and the 12- to 17-year-old age group is dominant.<ref name="nielsen-net-ratings-july06">YouTube U.S. Web Traffic Grows 17 Percent Week Over Week, According to Nielsen//Netratings (English) (Press Release). Netratings, Inc.. Neilsen Media Research (2006-07-21). Retrieved on 2006-09-12.</ref> Youtube's pre-eminence in the online video market is staggering. According to the website Hitswise.com, Youtube commands up to 64% of the UK online video market.<ref name="YouTube Google Zeitgeist">"Google pays the price to capture online video zeitgeist", www.Eurekastreet.com.au, Jesuit Communications., 2006-10-17. Retrieved on 2006-10-18. (in English) </ref>

On October 9, 2006, it was announced that the company will be purchased by Google for US$1.65 billion in stock. The purchase agreement between Google and YouTube came after YouTube presented three agreements with media companies in an attempt to escape the threat of copyright-infringement lawsuits. YouTube will continue to operate independently, and the company's 67 employees and its co-founders will continue working within the company.<ref>Google to buy YouTube for $1.65 billion (October 9, 2006). Retrieved on 2006-10-09.</ref> The deal to acquire YouTube closed on November 13. It is Google's biggest purchase to date. [1]

Word spreads and traditional media take notice

In its short time on the web, YouTube has grown quickly and received much attention. Online word-of-mouth has been primarily responsible for YouTube's growth since its inception, and gave the site its first surge of publicity when it hosted the popular Saturday Night Live short Lazy Sunday.<ref name="YouTube-SNL">http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060329-6481.html YouTube hosts Lazy Sunday, accessed July 7, 2006</ref> However, YouTube's official policy prohibits submission of copyrighted material, and NBC Universal, owners of SNL, soon decided to take action.

In February 2006, NBC asked for the removal of some of its copyrighted content from YouTube, including Lazy Sunday and 2006 Olympics clips.<ref name="forbes" /><ref name="backstage">NBC Pressures Websites on Video Clips by Andrew Wallenstein, 22 February 2006, Backstage.com</ref> The following month, in an attempt to strengthen its policy against copyright infringement, YouTube set a 10-minute maximum limit on video length (except for content submitted via its Director Program, which specifically hosts original material by amateur filmmakers). However, the real cutoff is 10:58. This restriction is often circumvented by uploaders, who instead split their original video into smaller segments, each shorter than the 10-minute limit.

Though YouTube had done its part to comply with NBC's demands, the incident made the news, giving YouTube its most prominent publicity yet. As the site continued to grow, NBC began to realize the possibilities, and in June 2006 made an unusual move. The network had reconsidered its actions and was announcing a strategic partnership with YouTube. Under the terms of the partnership, an official NBC channel will be set up on YouTube, showcasing promotional clips for the series The Office. YouTube will also promote NBC's videos throughout its site.<ref>Press Releases: NBC And YouTube Announce Strategic Partnership. YouTube (Press Room) (2006-06-27). Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref>

CBS, which had previously also asked YouTube to remove several of its clips, followed suit in July 2006. In a statement indicative of how the traditional media industry's perception of YouTube (and similar sites) has changed, Sean McManus, president of CBS News and Sports noted:

   
YouTube
Our inclination now is, the more exposure we get from clips like that, the better it is for CBS News and the CBS television network, so in retrospect we probably should have embraced the exposure, and embraced the attention it was bringing CBS, instead of being parochial and saying ‘let’s pull it down.’<ref>Montopoli, Brian. "CBS To YouTube: Who Loves You, Baby?", CBSNews.com, 2006-07-17. Retrieved on 2006-07-28. (in English)</ref>
   
YouTube

In August of 2006, YouTube announced that, within 18 months, it hopes to offer every music video ever created, while still remaining free of charge. Warner Music Group and EMI have confirmed that they are among the companies in talks to implement this plan.<ref>"YouTube aims to show music videos", BBC NEWS, 2006-08-16.</ref> In September Warner Music and YouTube signed a deal, in which YouTube will be allowed to host every music video Warner produced while sharing a portion of the advertisement income. Additionally, user-created videos on YouTube will be allowed to use Warner songs in their soundtracks.<ref>"Warner Music coming to YouTube", arstechnica.com, 2006-09-18.</ref>

On October 9, CBS, along with Universal Music Group and Sony BMG Music Entertainment, also agreed to provide content to YouTube.<ref name="usatodayCBS">"YouTube strikes content deals", USATODAY.com, 2006-10-09. Retrieved on 2006-10-09. (in English)</ref>

Accessibility

  • On YouTube: Users may submit videos in several common-file formats (such as .mpeg and .avi). YouTube automatically converts them to Flash Video (with extension .flv) and makes them available for online viewing. Flash Video is a popular video format among large hosting sites due to its wide compatibility.
  • Outside YouTube: Each video is accompanied by the full HTML markup for linking to it and/or embedding it within another page; a small addition to the markup for the latter will make the video autoplay when the page is accessed. These simple cut-and-paste options are popular particularly with users of social/networking sites. Poor experiences have however been cited by members of such sites,<ref>http://news.livejournal.com/92728.html</ref> where autoplaying embedded YouTube videos has been reported to slow down page loading time or even to cause browsers to crash.
  • General Concerns: Videos can be downloaded off YouTube's website and viewed offline with various video player applications; however, this may be a violation of copyright.
  • Download Quality: With the update to Flash G.U.I (Graphic User Interface) file formats, YouTube has had problems with videos loading altogether on the Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox web browsers. No news has been given for when this will be repaired.[citation needed]
  • Index sites: Recently many sites had started to bloom while offering an index service, which arrange the content on YouTube by relativity, ie links arranged by order of seasons and episodes of a certain show. Some of the sites, such as TvLinks or the recently shut-down Daily-Episodes, gather around them a rather large community of users, which make requests and report bad links.

Revenue model

Before being bought by Google, YouTube stated that its business model is advertising-based. Some industry commentators have speculated that YouTube's running costs — specifically the bandwidth required — may be as high as US$1 million per-month,<ref>Frommer, Dan. "Your Tube, Whose Dime?". Forbes'. April 27, 2006.</ref> thereby fuelling criticisms that the company, like many internet start-ups, did not have a viably implemented business model. Advertisements were launched on the site beginning in March 2006. In April, YouTube started using Google AdSense. YouTube subsequently stopped using AdSense. Given its traffic levels, video streams and pageviews, some have calculated that YouTube's potential revenues could be in the millions per month.<ref>http://www.watchmojo.com/web/blog/?p=500</ref>

Controversies

Copyright infringement

YouTube policy does not allow content to be uploaded by anyone not permitted by United States copyright law to do so, and the company frequently removes uploaded infringing content. Nonetheless, a large amount of it continues to be uploaded. Generally, unless the copyright holder reports them, YouTube only discovers these videos via indications within the YouTube community through self-policing. The primary way in which YouTube identifies the content of a video is through the search terms that uploaders associate with clips. Some users have taken to creating alternative words as search terms to be entered when uploading specific type of files (similar to the deliberate misspelling of band names on MP3 filesharing networks). For a short time, members could also report one another. The service offers a flagging feature, intended as a means for reporting questionable content, including that which might constitute copyright infringement. However, the feature can be susceptible to abuse; for a time, some users were flagging other users' original content for copyright violations, purely out of spite. YouTube proceeded to remove copyright infringement from the list of offenses flaggable by members.

On October 5, 2006 the Japanese Society for Rights of Authors, Composers and Publishers (JASRAC) had their copyright complaints regarding Japanese media on YouTube finalized. Thousands of media from popular Japanese artists (such as Tokyo Jihen and various other music including Jpop) were removed.

When CBS and Universal Music Group signed agreements to provide content to YouTube on October 9, they also announced that they would use new technology that will help them find copyrighted material and remove it.<ref name="usatodayCBS"/>

TV journalist Robert Tur filed the first lawsuit against the company in summer 2006, alleging copyright infringement for hosting a number of famous news clips without permission. The case has yet to be resolved.<ref>Jones, K.C.. "Journalist Sues YouTube For Copyright Infringement", InformationWeek.com, 2006-07-18. Retrieved on 2006-07-28. (in English)</ref><ref>Montgomery, James. "YouTube Slapped With First Copyright Lawsuit For Video Posted Without Permission", MTV.com, 2006-07-19. Retrieved on 2006-07-28. (in English)</ref>

On November 9th, 2006, Artie Lange said his lawyer was in talks with YouTube, after finding his entire DVD, It's the Whiskey Talking, available for free on their site. Artie said he will either demand money from them, or else he will sue. <ref>http://scripting.wordpress.com/2006/10/12/scripting-news-for-10122006/</ref>

Use of acoustic fingerprints

On October 12 2006, YouTube announced that because of recent agreements with high-profile content creators, they were now required to use anti-piracy software. The software uses an audio-signature technology that can spot a low-quality copy of a licensed music video or other content. YouTube would have to substitute an approved version of the clip or take the material down automatically. Analysts noted removal of content based on such a system might negatively impact user satisfaction. This is frustrating for viewers who upload anime music videos, because most AMV's use licensed music content. <ref name=Yahoo_APSCHY1> Veiga, Alex. "Anti-piracy system could hurt YouTube", Yahoo! (Associated Press), 2006-10-12. Retrieved on 2006-10-13. </ref> <ref name=MSNBC_APSCHY1> Veiga, Alex. "Anti-piracy system could hurt YouTube", MSNBC (Associated Press), 2006-10-12. Retrieved on 2006-10-13. </ref>

Violence

On their 6:30 PM bulletin on June 1, 2006, ITV News in the UK reported that YouTube and sites like it were encouraging violence and bullying amongst teenagers, who were filming fights on their mobile phones (see happy slapping), and then uploading them to YouTube. While the site provides a function for reporting excessively violent videos, the news report stated that communication with the company was difficult.<ref>ITV News, 6:30 PM bulletin on ITV1, 1 June 2006</ref>

White House Office of National Drug Control Policy involvement

In September 2006, the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) began running anti-drug PSAs through the YouTube System.<ref>http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0609240315sep24,1,3734225.story?coll=chi-opinionfront-hed</ref> In response, many YouTube users began uploading rebuttals and rating the public service announcements down. Since mid-September, the ONDCP has removed the ability to rate or comment on any of their PSAs as a result.

New York Times reports anti-U.S. videos

On October 5th, 2006, The New York Times reported on the proliferation of what they considered to be anti-U.S. videos on YouTube.<ref name="NYT1">"Anti-U.S. Attack Videos Spread on Web", New York Times, October 5, 2006.</ref>

Zucker political ad

On October 10th, 2006, YouTube users flagged the political ad of noted producer, and former long-time Democrat, David Zucker as being inappropriate for viewers under 18.<ref>http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=52405</ref> <ref>http://drudgereport.com/flashma.htm</ref> The ad criticized the Clinton administration and the Democratic Party as weak in protecting national security. Some questioned YouTube's flag--normally used to indicate material that is inappropriate for viewers under 18--though Zucker's ad contains nothing profane or pornographic. The GOP decided not to use Zucker's ad in the 2006 campaign, because it was considered "over the top." On October 12th, YouTube removed the age-verification page and no longer censored the video for viewers under 18.

Domain name problem

YouTube's immense success has unintentionally reduced business for an American company, Universal Tube and Rollerform Equipment Corp., whose website, http://www.utube.com, has frequently been shut down by extremely high numbers of visitors unsure about the spelling of YouTube's domain name.<ref> Christian Zappone. "Help! YouTube is killing my business!: An Ohio company's sales get 'killed' as YouTube surfers cripple utube.com, a pipe equipment seller's web site." CNNMoney.com, October 12 2006; retrieved November 17, 2007.</ref> At the beginning of November 2006, Universal Tube filed suit in federal court against YouTube.<ref>Rhys Blakely. "Utube sues YouTube" Times Online, November 02, 2006; retrieved November 17, 2006.</ref>

Utube, based out of Perrysburg, Ohio, has requested as part of their suit that the youtube.com domain be transferred to them.<ref>"Utube.com v. YouTube.com: Ohio pipe firm says confused web surfers are hurting its business" The Smoking Gun, November 2, 2007; retrieved Nomvember 17, 2007.</ref>

Notable effects on YouTube users

YouTube's popularity has led to the creation of many YouTube Internet celebrities, popular individuals who have attracted significant publicity in their home countries from their videos.<ref>Feifer, Jason. "Video makers find a vast and eager audience", Worcester Telegram, June 11, 2006.</ref> These memes have come from many different backgrounds. The most subscribed YouTube member, as of August 16, 2006, is Geriatric1927, a 79-year-old pensioner from England who gained widespread recognition within a week of making his debut on the site.<ref name="profile">geriatric1927's Youtube profile</ref> For these users, the Internet fame has had various unexpected effects. By way of example, YouTube user and former receptionist Brooke Brodack from Massachusetts has been signed by NBC's Carson Daly for an 18-month development contract.<ref>Collins, Scott, "Now she has their attention" Los Angeles Times, July 19, 2006 (Accessed July 19, 2006)</ref> On the other hand, Australian user Emmalina's fame led to her computer being hacked and private information stolen from her computer, forcing her to remove her videos from YouTube.<ref>Re: Emmalina leaves...again?. youtubetalk.com (free registration required) (2006-08-08).</ref> Another has been the uncovered fictional blog of lonelygirl15, now discovered to be the work of New Zealand actress Jessica Rose and some film directors.

Youtube has also become a means of promoting bands and their music. One such example is OK Go which got a huge radio hit and an MTV Video Music Awards performance out of the treadmill video for Here It Goes Again.

Notable YouTube celebrities

References

<references/>

See also

Similar websites

External links

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