• @[email protected]
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    141 month ago

    They chose to store an exabyte of storage without a business model people find acceptable.

    They also decided they didn’t care about moderation and became a cesspit of far-right and conspiracy trash.

    They can fuck off.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      I dunno. I pay for premium. The price feels justified given how much I use YouTube pretty much every day.

      But if others feel differently, that’s fine.

      The far right shit is bad, there’s a lot bad in general, but I still get a lot of value from lefty politics to atheism content to video game essays to music videos.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        I see why you might make that decision.

        Myself, I never use YouTube on purpose. I sometimes go there for music videos, short clips (like a Simpsons gag), and video game walkthroughs. Honestly, none of that really needs a mega global behemoth company to back it. The price they charge for premium is too much for me, and the ads are intrusive.

        So, I don’t want to pay what they’re charging. But I get why some people might.

    • @GarrulousBrevity
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      21 month ago

      My bigger complaint is that there isn’t another choice. It is Google’s choice to spend that much money, and it should be the consumer’s choice to use the better product if they make a bad experience with ads… Antitrust Google to fuck so competition can make sure there’s a better choice

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        I think the consolidation of smaller websites in favor of everything being on a handful of private platforms (eg: facebook, google) is a big loss.

        Like, if you’re a small band you should be able to host your handful of music videos on your own site. But then you don’t get all the network effects and discoverability, I guess. Federation might be a solution.

        Maybe also breaking google up would help, but left unattended things would merge back into a monopoly eventually.