• @Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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    61 year ago

    Decided to test it out myself on Firefox and Edge. Didn’t get the delay, but did get ads both times because I don’t have adblockers set up over there. The second was unskippable. Ugh.

  • @blackkn1ght@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1671 year ago

    So Alphabet:

    • is the developer the most used browser (chrome) and its open source skeleton (chromium) on which most of all of the other browsers are based on (edge, brave etc)

    • has the most used video platform online, with no close second (unless you count porn, but i’d still argue its not close)

    • has the biggest share of devices relying on its platform worldwide (android)

    • has the most used search engine worldwide.

    Alphabet has to be split up. Alphabet alone is deciding what shape internet will take in the future.

    • @DrQuint@lemm.ee
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      271 year ago

      All of those are meaningless peanuts versus

      • Owns the biggest (borderline only) web ad service in the world
    • @HollandJim@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      is the developer the most used browser (chrome) and its open source skeleton (chromium) on which most of all of the other browsers are based on (edge, brave etc)

      Which was branched from Apple’s open Webkit base, but let’s all also forget about that.

      They take the IP of others, spin it a bit and then block everyone. Burn them down.

        • BolexForSoup
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          1 year ago

          They didn’t do anything of the sort. We don’t need to endlessly recite the history of everything developed. If you want to call attention to it go right ahead but they didn’t give Apple a pass.

          • @jackhp95@lemmy.world
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            181 year ago

            They totally do though. You can ONLY use webkit on any iOS device. Chrome, Firefox, etc. they all are forced to use webkit on iOS. Neither Google or Apple are treating the web nicely, but at least you have a choice to use a different browser. Apple makes that effectively impossible.

        • @namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          The inevitable fate of any useful software that’s not GPL.

          When will people learn???

          Edit: Ironically, KHTML was originally LGPL. So modifications to KHTML were required to be open source by the license, but Chrome itself isn’t required to be open source (at least as far as I understand it, I am not an expert here). Nevertheless, if it were stronger GPL, then it probably wouldn’t have been impossible to write features like DRM in chrome. So I would have been a bit of an idiot to say that KHTML isn’t GPL (because LGPL is a weaker version of GPL), but in effect, the outcome is the same - all because of that big fat L at the beginning.

    • @tias@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      And it doesn’t remove promotions by the content creators, so you’re still seeing lots of ads. Still, since my kids spend so much time on YouTube I think it’s worth reducing the amount of brain washing, but I’m definitely not happy about the pricing. It’s ridiculous when you compare it to other streaming services who also have to produce or license their content.

      • @lemmyingly@lemm.ee
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        31 year ago

        How about seeing YouTube adverts to then watch a video that’s entirely an advertisement for the company that’s sponsoring the YouTuber.

    • @gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com
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      31 year ago

      when the email came through for the price hike, I told my wife we should drop the family plan and use more advanced adblocking and invidous etc - apparently my demo didn’t pass the wife and children test… so guess who’s continuing to pay for YT Premium?

  • @skozzii@lemmy.ca
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    11 year ago

    Surely this is against anti-trust laws.

    Imagine if Microsoft slowed down everything that wasn’t on their services, it’s insane.

  • MudMan
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    751 year ago

    Incidentally, I dropped Youtube’s web app like a rock when they started messing with adblockers and today they emailed me to say they’re cutting down features in my account because “I don’t have enough of a history”.

    I swear, these decaying tech firms just don’t get the value of not appearing to be flailing in desperation.

    • sadreality
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      151 year ago

      hey’re cutting down features in my account because “I don’t have enough of a history”.

      any idea what this actually means?

      What features are they cutting down?

      Is this a free account?

      • sour
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        1 year ago

        they turn off video recommendations if your watch history isn’t on

        • @jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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          51 year ago

          This is a plus for me. I don’t want them to recommend me anything. I don’t trust them not to recommend me stuff that’s going to piss me off.

          • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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            81 year ago

            Their recommendations engine seems to stuck on “50 more of exactly the last thing you watched, plus a dash of right-wing conspiracy nonsense.”

            • @TheFriendlyArtificer@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              Once I made the mistake of looking up how to change the oil on my Kawasaki Vulcan without being in incognito. Now half of my recommendations are how to perform maintenance on motorcycles that I’ll never own. And ads for Harley Davidson. A company whose business model is converting gasoline into noise.

              I just use youtube-dl now and have it go to my NAS. It’s not easier then going to the website, per se. But now the video lives on my storage and it won’t go away after a corporation’s billionth DMCA claim that hour.

              Genuinely wish I had done this a decade ago on my favorite articles. Link rot is getting worse and worse and YouTube is the absolute worst.

            • MudMan
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              41 year ago

              Turns out when you stop using it the recommendations become more and more unhinged and take on a slight pleading tone.

              It’s weird and kinda satisfying to watch, honestly.

            • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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              31 year ago

              For me it’s "oh? You really like this creator? Be careful not to binge their backlog all at once! I think you’ve had enough. Let me hide the rest of their content for you so you’re not tempted

              Hey, how about this news show where the guys stand instead of sitting, and wear normal clothes? They still awkwardly read off a teleprompter and have a very shallow understanding of the topics, but come on, you should watch them again. I know their shrill, forced, voices make you cringe and exit the video as fast as you can, but let me put that up next on auto play for you again

      • edric
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        81 year ago

        I received the same notification on my artist account. I can’t remember everything, but it was something like daily upload limits for videos and shorts and other creator related stuff. I don’t think there’s anything related to just basic usage features.

        • MudMan
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          101 year ago

          They take away the ability to include links in video descriptions. That’s still not related to watching videos, but it seems like a legit eff you to small content creators.

          • edric
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            71 year ago

            Oh yeah I forgot about that. That’s definitely a big issue. I think you can’t also pin comments.

      • e-ratic
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        221 year ago

        I had the same email, it’s creator-related features. So if you don’t produce content it shouldn’t affect anything

  • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆
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    141 year ago

    Someone should investigate deeply. My combo of a whitelist firewall on an OpenWRT variant and Graphene often has a bandwidth issue that is clearly software related only after watching something from YT. I can stop the apps manually and close everything related to browsing and the connection issue still exists. I can disconnect the internet from my router and the problem still persists. However, if I shutdown all 3 devices for a few minutes and bring them up fresh, the network connection is flawless. Something is running in memory, and I believe it is related to YT, but I lack the skills to break it down further. I like to run an AI server and it is simply useless if anything on the network has connected to YT since booting.

    I’ve also noticed when family is watching YT premium (not something I use) and I am downloading a LLM from HF, the internet bandwidth of our network more than doubles on my wired connection. In between the streaming packets from YT the speed on the download jumps massively. If family is watching YT, I can actually download a LLM faster. That just seems odd to me that those are connected.

      • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆
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        61 year ago

        Does that seem legitimate to you? There are many more implications below the surface with this. Yes, YT has little black boxes that cache content locally with ISPs that also means they are likely filtering all data. I don’t like that part, but I can live with it.

        The idea that something is running on my device that seems to be hidden, but where I can stop the behavior by flushing the memory; that is extremely alarming. If I understand it correctly they have direct memory access for streaming video through h.264. Whatever they are doing is causing me to drop connections and impacting my WiFi signal stability even when offline doing tasks unrelated to YT. As soon as I reboot the problem is gone. I distrust them so much now that I do a hard reboot any time I watch YT. (It improves battery life as well.) This is criminal behavior if my speculative analysis is correct and they are running stuff like this in the background. I’m running a combo where I control every aspect of my network. This should not be happening in my circumstance.

    • JWBananas
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      41 year ago

      Sometimes, less is more.

      I would recommend trimming all your custom configuration from your router/firewall, one change at a time, until you can no longer reproduce the issue.

      Or go the other way around: set up a barebones configuration, confirm the issue is resolved, and begin adding one customization at a time until it breaks.

      How do your bufferbloat tests look?

      https://www.waveform.com/tools/bufferbloat

      It sounds like you have a lot of stateful inspection configured. YouTube’s heavy usage of QUIC (i.e. UDP transport) may not play well with your config.

      And, incidentally, what does your hardware look like?

      Frankly, even the most barebones router should be able to handle YouTube. I am running pfSense in an ESXi VM, with passthru Intel gigabit NICs, 2 GB reserved RAM, and 2 vCPU (shared, but with higher priority than other VMs) on a Dell desktop with a second-gen i7 that was shipped from the factory in 2012.

      Yes, I am routing on decade-old hardware. And I have never seen anything like what you are describing.

      YouTube should “just work.”

      I am going to assume that if you’re running OpenWRT, then you are probably using a typical consumer router? Please correct me if I am wrong.

      Have you by any chance tried backing up your OpenWRT config and going back to stock firmware?

      I know, I know, OpenWRT is great. I have a consumer router that I flashed with it to use strictly as a wireless AP.

      But consumer devices flashed with vanilla OpenWRT tend to have very, very little resources left over to handle fun configurations.

      And I have a feeling some of the fun configuration might be contributing to your issues.

      • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆
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        21 year ago

        After further investigation, apparently one of my routers 2.4G antennae is either held low or more likely fried. Sometimes the firmware is switching the working antenna more rapidly, enough to cause server outputs to look stable but other times it sticks on transmit or receive and doesn’t toggle. Gradio is apparently not robust enough to compensate for the inconsistent connection.

        It sucks because the router is from PCWRT and the dude updates and maintains the router and supplies a simplified interface. I’ve used it for years. It looks like LUCY has come a long way since I used it last. I have a couple of the same routers as the PCWRT router I was going to flash with OpenWRT, but the documentation for flashing this model is terrible. I guess I am going to need to figure out something going forward now. …so yeah, maybe not YT.

        • JWBananas
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          21 year ago

          When your layer 1 problem turns into a layer 3 problem 😅

  • @Something_Complex@lemmy.world
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    It it legal? I remember when China’s tech giants started infighting and the party ended up dividing them and phorbiding them to do so.

    They where creating tech exclusive for their devices and internally block all other out.

    I just figured if we aren’t doing it here there should be a reason. (Apple appart)

    Edit:guys what I’m saying matters the orthographic mistakes can be easily attribute to my lack of interest in writing the proper queen’s English when any shit will do

  • @casmael@lemm.ee
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    1521 year ago

    It’s fucking incredible watching Google change from a fairly well-liked company into essentially fucking Comcast. Fucking incredible.

      • @casmael@lemm.ee
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        301 year ago

        Well I’ve gone from being entirely indifferent to strongly disliking Google. I am actively and somewhat successfully in the process of de-googling. I encourage my friends to do the same, with some success. I think the writing is on the wall. Google seems to have no desire to maintain any sort of goodwill or positive feeling amongst the general public, whom it clearly views as a naturally occurring resource rather than a customer base. Nobody can predict the future but I don’t have a good feeling about the future of the company. Perhaps they will be able to diversify, but their recent actions show both that they deeply misunderstand their product and also that they lack good ideas about how to progress and evolve as an organisation. Fuck Google. All my homies hate Google.

        • @SheDiceToday@eslemmy.es
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          101 year ago

          The hardest part of ‘de-googling’ is the stranglehold it has on email. Between them and microsoft, I’ve only seen a few companies (small to medium size) that don’t use one of those two as the email. It’s mind-boggling. If either of them ever got testy, they could bring entire sectors down just by using the information stored in emails on.

  • TBF I’ve seen a rare behavior in FF that makes some websites load slowly for no good reason (not an adblock thing). Anticompetitive either way but Google could be exploiting this bug.

    • @ColonelPanic@lemm.ee
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      41 year ago

      I think you give them too much credit. From what I’ve seen, it’s just a setTimeout call for 5 seconds if you’re on Firefox, which is similar to what all those shady cookie popups from TrustArc do if you click “Reject all”.

    • @Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      21 year ago

      This happens all the time to me on Android. Sites, especially Google searches, sometimes take 30 seconds to 2 minutes to load. It’s frustrating when I’m in a rush.