Over 100 Hours of Video Uploaded To YouTube Every Minute 83
jones_supa writes "Google's YouTube is celebrating its 8-year birthday, and at the same time they reveal some interesting numbers. 'Today, more than 100 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute. That's more than four days of video uploaded each minute! Every month, more than 1 billion people come to YouTube to access news, answer questions and have a little fun. That's almost one out of every two people on the Internet. Millions of partners are creating content for YouTube and more than 1,000 companies worldwide have mandated a one-hour mid-day break to watch nothing but funny YouTube videos. Well, we made that last stat up, but that would be cool (the other stats are true).'"
Where's the obvious second half of this statistic? (Score:5, Insightful)
How many hours of video per minute are people watching?
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A LOT
yesterday my son was learning origami via youtube videos. way better than a $20 book like when i was a kid
Re:Where's the obvious second half of this statist (Score:4, Insightful)
Agreed. And if you take a look at the top subscribed channels [vidstatsx.com], it's not all complete crap or copyrighted-by-someone-else material.
Of course, most of the stuff on that list is not something I'd like to watch, but take any list of commercial TV channels, and I'd feel the same way. :)
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-Magumogu.
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Agreed. And if you take a look at the top subscribed channels, it's not all complete crap or copyrighted-by-someone-else material.
To me, working through that list would be a spectacularly bad way of finding videos that are worth watching.
Re:Where's the obvious second half of this statist (Score:5, Funny)
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Well, the total in 2009 was 110,952 [yahoo.com] according to Yahoo Canada, fwtw. So 27,738 per year and 76 per day, assuming 4 years of non-stop uploading, slow at first of course but reaching high volumes soon enough. Meow, or should we say nyan? But 111k sounds wayyyyyyyyyy too low...
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None, because 35 hours are chicks showing their tits and making vapid "replies" to popular videos. Another 25 hours are chicks with 20 minute videos doing makeup tutorials, 20 hours are chicks coming home from shopping trips and showing what they bought (I'm serious, this is apparently a fucking "thing", now). The remaining 20 are idiots attempting to make viral videos, but possessing no talent. Or jackholes in their basement trying to be the "next big star" like the other 800 obnoxious teenagers with cult
Have they hit a petabyte yet? (Score:3)
I wonder how big, in terms of storage, is the server farm to maintain this monstrosity.
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oh, my bad.. make that 30.. its only 6000 minutes per minute.. could be a lot worse
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oh, that's assuming shitty resolution of around 340p
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It's Google's infrastructure. THAT's how big.
If I had to guess, youtube is just another app sitting on their distributed whatever it is.
100 hours of video / minute (Score:2)
Re:News for Nerds (Score:4, Insightful)
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At the rate youtube is expanding the electrons in this universe may soon vanish. Could data become so dense that a black hole is formed?
well maybe... :. Data=(Mass*SpeedOfLight)^2
Data=Knowledge, Knowledge=Power, Power=Energy,
Energy=(Mass*SpeedOfLight)^2
assuming 1 bit it the basic unit of data,
r=2gm/c^2 == (r(c^2))/g=m
d=mc^2 == d/c^2=m
(r(c^2))/g=d/c^2
dg=c^2 r(c^2)
oh wait you weren't serious...
Manual review (Score:2)
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How would you train all those people to recognize every copyrighted item? Just every copyrighted piece of music would be impossible. A computer is going to have a lower error rate on this than any group of humans.
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100 hrs/minute is 6,000 hrs/hr, so you'd need 6,000 people employed around the clock. It's probably close to minimum wage work, so $10/hr or so, puts that at $60,000 per hour or $1,000/minute.
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And just extending your calculations: 6,000 people employed around the clock at $10 per hour (or more people working shifts so you get 6,000 people working every hour for 24 hours a day-7 days a week) is $60,000 per hour or $1,440,000 per day or over $525 million per year.
Total Google revenues for 2012 were $46,039,000,000 so the "Review Uploaded YouTube Videos" department would cost Google 1% of it's revenue every year.
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I've got an idea to fire back at them. Require all takedown notices to be reviewed by a human person before being submitted. Then in exchange, Google will promise to have a human review each takedown notice on THEIR end as well. If Google finds a violation - they take it down. If they don't find a violation - the people who sent the complaint are billed for Google's review time!!
Re: Manual review (Score:1)
Wow that actually seems fair
Use Mechanical Turk (Re:Manual review) (Score:1)
Flag button and disparagement of title (Score:2)
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Doing my part (Score:3)
The Copyrobeast (Score:2)
myself eating at my desk in silence
In other words, like Magibon [wikipedia.org]. Unfortunately, such videos might be the only videos allowed on YouTube if Big Copyright gets its way [pineight.com].
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I keep on wondering (Score:2)
No, i have no background whatsoever in economics and\or management.
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Some folks have actual advertising deals where they get paid (less YOuTube commission) when you watch their video.
And then there's the little side videos of "you may be interested in this.".
And then there are the adverts placed in your search.
Okay, I have a question. In all of internet history, has anyone ever clicked on an advertisement and actually purchased an item? Just wondering.
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Thank you for supporting Slashdot.
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Yup (Score:2)
Good Buy (Score:2)
I wonder how things have turned out if MS bought YouTube instead?
Re:Good Buy (Score:4, Insightful)
Same thing that happened with hotmail. They switch to Windows servers, it crashes and burns horribly, so they switch back. There's no quality control, no development, it goes to hell, and everyone switches to the far superior service Google offers (since they decided to grow their own and not acquire youtube).
Then they switch everyone over to zune.com or something to try capitalizing on their name .. or perhaps trying to gain a name, it's hard to tell really .. complete with commercials about people deleting hundreds of hours of video in a single click in the middle of other unrelated activities, because you know that's the feature we've all really been missing.
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They switch to Windows servers, it crashes and burns horribly, so they switch back. There's no quality control, no development, it goes to hell, and everyone switches to the far superior service Google offers (since they decided to grow their own and not acquire youtube).
Citation needed.
Anyway, try Outlook.com sometime.
More nines (Score:1)
Theodore Sturgeon once snapped at critics of science fiction by saying "90 percent of anything is garbage." This "law" has since been ported to other fields.
But in the case of YouTube, Sturgeon's Law would need a few more (or a lot more) nines.
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So how long... (Score:3)
...until the total length of video on YouTube is greater than the age of the universe?
Re:So how long... (Score:5, Informative)
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Dont forget second order effects:
http://youtube-global.blogspot.com/2010/11/great-scott-over-35-hours-of-video.html [blogspot.com]
Unfortunately (?) d^3/dt^3 showing acceleration in upload rate videos is flat
The other second order effect (Score:2)
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About two million years at the current rate. Of course, if the rate of uploading continues to accelerate as it has been doing, they might get there a bit sooner.
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Age of the universe: About 13.8 billion years.
13.8e9 years / 6000 = 2.3e6
So, assuming a constant upload rate (a huge assumption): in 2.3 million years.
(I should have includeed the additional age of the universe until this happens,
but that's less than a rounding error at this precision.)
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...until the total length of video on YouTube is greater than the age of the universe?
Considering the universe is 6000 years old, 6000/100 HPM= 60 minutes.
Comment removed (Score:3)
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You can always take a peek inside [google.com] to find out.
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You say that, but I've looked at videos that buffered at low resolutions even though I could watch a popular, high-resolution video without buffering. So, yes, you can access any video but you probably won't enjoy it.
there's something for everyone (Score:3)
I have to exert some willpower now and again to not become annoyed at all of the garbage on YouTube (or the Internet for that matter).
The wisdom of George Carlin is immensely helpful in this regard: "Have you ever noticed that their stuff is **** and your **** is stuff?"
RIP, sir.
"warp 39" in star trek terms (Score:2, Interesting)
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peter303 doesn't explain well and is bad at arithmetic.
The original Star Trek writers' notes from the 60s have an equation to figure out the Warp Factor (the 5 in "plot a course to Earth, Warp 5"). Divide the speed of the ship by the speed of light and take the cube root. So Warp 1 is equivalent to the speed of light (the cube root of 1) and warp 10 would be 1000 times the speed of light. it's a pretty simple scale.
I think he is trying to say that if you took "hours per minute" as a speed(which makes no sen
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mostly crap (Score:1)
How many copied videos? (Score:2)
Seems like any time someone has a popular video, another user rips it and uploads under their username it to steal hits. The copies and compilations make it really hard to find original content when you're doing searches.
Reposts? (Score:3)
How many of those uploads are reposts?
Many popular videos have numerous low quality reposts with appended logos, intros and captions so that individuals can glom onto the original popularity. It's so bad that it's often impossible to find the original video a year, sometimes months, after the original posting.
How often do they add storage (Score:2)
Makes me wonder how fast they are having to add storage. For that matter, what type of storage are they using to use for the constant read / writes. And that is just for YouTube - forget Gmail, Google Earth, Google Docs and Google. Man, I would love to see pictures of Google's DataCenter. Oh, wait, I can Google it:
http://images.google.com/search?site=&tbm=isch&source=hp&biw=1536&bih=891&q=google+data+center&oq=google+data+&gs_l=img.3.0.0l9j0i10.648.2409.0.4177.12.11.0.0.0.0.297.1 [google.com]