• @[email protected]
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    671 month ago

    Until a flood of TikTok users bankrupt them, anyways.

    Not entirely sure how you’d make the economics of hosting endless video files work without great big piles of money and some way to get even more big piles of money on a routine basis :/

    • Chozo
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      371 month ago

      Yeah, video hosting is notoriously expensive. It’s why there’s still not a real competitor to YouTube, because nobody else but Google could afford to run the platform at a net loss for the amount of time required to build a profitable user base.

      If even a tiny percentage of TikTok’s US user base decided to move to Loops, that may be enough traffic to not only completely disable Loops, but would probably impact the rest of the Fediverse at large, too.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        Interaction with the fediverse is very limited atm

        Edit: and by that I mean non-existent. It’s still very early in development.

      • @WhatAmLemmy
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        31 month ago

        The millions of free porn sites would beg to differ…

        • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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          71 month ago

          Free? They are ad-ridden and unlike YouTube, porn videos are removed from the site all the time.

          • @WhatAmLemmy
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            31 month ago

            Yet none of them really paywall you for using an adblocker.

            Actually come to think of it, porn sites are the only place I allow ads (obv blocking the pop ups and other dark pattern fuckery)… probablys because I learned to ignore them entirely as a teen before ad blockers existed.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        Short videos do not need to be long lived (they could be deleted after 3 days) And some peer to peer could work really good for “viral” videos.

    • @PriorityMotif
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      81 month ago

      Companies or creators can run their own instance can’t they?

      • @[email protected]
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        61 month ago

        AFAIK, it’s still not had the code released, so at the moment there’s just the one site and you can’t host your own.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        They can. And if at any point it becomes untenable, you can just archive whatever you host, shut down your instance, and put the videos up for download somewhere.

        • @Bassman1805
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          1 month ago

          If a company is going bankrupt as a result of hosting a video service, they’re not going to be able to afford to archive and make it available for download either.

          • @TORFdot0
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            11 month ago

            Archive storage is relatively cheap. It’s the bandwidth and compute required to serve video that is expensive

          • @[email protected]
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            21 month ago

            Could you explain that idea in more detail? I’m not really sure I understand how that would work in practice.

    • @grue
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      1 month ago

      Not entirely sure how you’d make the economics of hosting endless video files work without great big piles of money

      You’re absolutely right, which is why BitTorrent never managed to take off. Totally unviable, doesn’t work at all, and definitely isn’t the technology underpinning federated video services like PeerTube.

      Edit: WTF? Why are you people denying the reality in front of your face? BitTorrent works and distributing video peer-to-peer is a solved problem. I do not understand this defeatist religious insistence that Video Must Cost Money.

      • Alphane Moon
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        21 month ago

        At one point BitTorrent/P2P was responsible for something like 30-40% of all global internet traffic.

        The thing is the protocol never really developed beyond some useful, but minor evolutionary updates.

        • @grue
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          21 month ago

          You say “never really developed beyond” as if that isn’t a synonym for “finished and working fine.”