With Reddit shutting down its API setting a precedent in the corporate tech world (and Reddit was a major outlier in that a ton of their users are technical minded and support third party clients, YouTube does not have that kind of userbase and will not get backlash for it), Twitter doing whatever the fuck they’re doing, and Google already hellbent on destroying ad blockers, the days of Newpipe, Invidious, and Freetube are numbered. Wouldn’t be surprised if they implement Netflix level DRM tomorrow that makes alt clients impossible. I say savour your alt clients while you can guys, you won’t be able to soon.

  • @davidgro
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    1971 year ago

    NewPipe at least already doesn’t use the API, it scrapes the website.

    … Which it just occurred to me might be one of the reasons Google is pushing that web integrity thing. Dang.

    • @foggy
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      441 year ago

      All the web integrity thing would do is force them to use a specific client when accessing YouTube to scrape their site.

      Putting shit out on your publicly accessible website enables all who access it to download anything you make available there.

      This is just regular cat and mouse.

      If my YouTube experience goes away, my hobbies will get some tlc. My reddit experience barely faltered with my transition to Lemmy

      We’ve been through all of this before and we’ll go through all of it again.

      • @[email protected]
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        171 year ago

        All the web integrity thing would do is force them to use a specific client when accessing YouTube to scrape their site.

        The problem is none of the attested browsers will let you to use them in this way.

        We already have DRM for video on the web. I believe it would be a similar problem to getting WideVine L1 content from e.g. Netflix in an open source app.

        • @foggy
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          1 year ago

          Ask me why I invested in Vimeo.

          But seriously, it will just make competitors thrive.

          I’ll pay for a nebula subscription before I sit through a single YouTube ad.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            Yea I think, if newpipe stops, I would switch to nebula. It would even help my yt addiction and I would support my youtubers without giving a share to youtube.

            • @deafboy
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              -21 year ago

              I’ve tried nebula because a video I wanted to watched on yt was released earlier there. That was the only video on the whole platform worth watching. It’s clickbait, you pay for.

              • @foggy
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                1 year ago

                Practical Engineering, Real Engineering, Real Science, Joe Scott, Climate Town… Dude in that screen grab of just 15 videos I’m ready to watch about 60% of them.

                Maybe you dont have a wide range of interests?

                https://talent.nebula.tv/creators/

                So many of my current YouTube subscriptions are on that list. 12 tone? Tom Scott? Adam Neely? Mary Spender? Real life lore? Leagle Eagle? The 1 Janitor? Invisible People? neo? JJ McCullough? Tier Zoo? Up & Atom? Charles Cornell? Strange Parts? Half as interesting? Not Just Bikes? Practical Engineering? HBomber guy? Minute physics? Tantacrul? Medlife Crisis?

                Some of youtubes best creators are on nebula.

                • @deafboy
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                  21 year ago

                  Tom Scott I watch on YT, Real engeneering is pretty good too.

                  Maybe I will give it another go, and try to ignore the thumbnails… and titles… :D

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                I like the Engineering dud, but this video looks a typical. Do they also have their yt videos on the platform or just other stuff.

  • @StewartGilligan
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    561 year ago

    Invidious doesn’t use YouTube’s API. It merely requests content from YouTube either directly or through a proxy. So, I don’t think it’ll disappear forever unless the developers stop working on it. It’s probably gonna be a game of cat and mouse where YouTube figures out how to break Invidious, and the devs keep finding a workaround.

    • Mubelotix
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      -101 year ago

      requests content from Youtube

      You mean through an API

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        But pretty much in the same way as the YouTube’s frontend requesting content from YouTube’s backend. This is an equivalent of you loading a video on YouTube then going to developer tools and copying links from the Network tab. AFAIK all tools (Invidious, Piped, yt-dl) work this way.

        • Mubelotix
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          21 year ago

          Yes. The problem is, it’s easy for google to break it again and again and again. I think we should just end Youtube

          • @Anders429
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            51 year ago

            Right, the best way to win here is just not to play. Stop watching content on YouTube altogether. Find alternative ways to watch that content, or simply don’t watch it at all.

          • CurseBunny [she/her]
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            -11 year ago

            So instead of scraping the website the easier solution is to end Youtube?

            Who wants to call Google and give them the difficult news that Youtube isn’t being renewed for another season?

      • @bighi
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        21 year ago

        Depending on the definition, loading a web page might me called an API, but that’s not what people mean when they talk about APIs.

  • nudny ekscentryk
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    481 year ago

    all of these are scrapers, so they will work unless YouTube gets rid of its web version

    • @kenbw2
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      161 year ago

      Or if Google implements some kind of feature that requires your browser to vouch that it’s not gonna play shenanigans with the page.

      Nah, nobody would be that crazy.

    • MeowdyPardner
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      61 year ago

      I think they mean something like widevine a la Netflix. Granted there are bypasses for some levels, but that could be a problem imo, iiuc that’s why there aren’t any alternate frontends for Netflix or HBO. I think that would also potentially mean issues playing YouTube in chromium or firefox on Linux if they used L1 (not sure what the current state of widevine on Linux is, last time I had Netflix I couldn’t watch on Linux and had to use my phone or Chromecast)

  • JasSmith
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    211 year ago

    Google isn’t going to kill YouTube’s API any time soon. It’s how billions of videos are viewable in apps and pages across the internet. They make far more money on that than any lost revenue by people using third party apps. Shutting down API access would be one of the most impactful events to the internet in history. Major lost viewership and advertising revenue coupled with extreme consumer backlash. Most devastating would be developer backlash, as they would all need to scramble to find alternatives.

  • @CustodialTeapot
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    201 year ago

    Oh, thought this was an article with facts and figures, no someone’s doomsaying and fear mongering…

    Many YouTube’s third party clients don’t use an API and having a public API with built in ads is a gold mine that many of YouTube’s embeds rely on for revenue. Doubt they’ll destroy that anytime soon.

    Along with that, many of YouTube’s top creators are already looking for alternatives, floatplane, nebula etc… It just takes a mass exodus to kick start them. And you bet Google is aware of that.

  • @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    Was talking to a friend who is a senior tech dude about the YT viewing habits of our kids. Asked if he had any recommendations for alt clients and he said… just pay for YT premium 🙃

      • @Darkhoof
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        41 year ago

        I use this in my TV and it is amazing. But I won’t advertise it anywhere because I’m afraid Google will just come up with a way to kill it.

        • Very_Bad_Janet
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          11 year ago

          Do you mean it’s giving your problems downloading or using? Or do you mean you are resisting using it for some other reason? I’m using it right now and I am not techy in any way (I only resisted it because I thought downloading it would take some kind of technical prowess).

    • @[email protected]OP
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      1 year ago

      “Don’t want your kids seeing ads that are absolutely not for kids? Easy! Just pay us!”

      Seriously it’s so hypocritical that they demonetize swearing yet show gambling, alcohol, and even the occasional barely-not-porn sexualized ad without a second thought.

      • @Screwthehole
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        91 year ago

        It’s not hypocrisy, it’s for $. $ means it’s not hypocrisy. Haven’t you been paying attention?

          • @[email protected]OP
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            61 year ago

            pay for attention

            Isn’t that basically what their “superchat” feature in YouTube live is? Pay money to force the host to read your comment? IDK I’ve never used it and don’t intend to.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              Lmao yes that also, it’s a way to support your favorite tuber (and 50% google) but I meant it as a joke because you said “[…] paying attention” aha

              I always pay attention, but when will attention pay me?

    • @ech0
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      31 year ago

      I’m about to have a daughter and was thinking about this also.

      I have been using Tube Archivist for months and its exactly what you need. You can control what subscriptions they watch, set download limits, etc.

      https://www.tubearchivist.com/

    • Engywuck
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      11 year ago

      My solution? I just blocked youtube.com at dns level in my house. Fuck it. It’s not like there aren’t books around to learn stuff from.

  • @n3m37h
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    1 year ago

    Removed by mod

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      The Git data underlying this repository cannot be read. Contact the administrator of this instance or delete this repository.

    • @Dasnap
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      11 year ago

      Cool looking project. So is this something you use to mirror other people’s YouTube channels? Does this only mirror them to a self-hosted PeerTube? I have a home server that could process the mirroring itself but I have nowhere near the storage. If this is something I can point at a subscription feed and then point at a PeerTube server then I’d be happy running it in a Docker container or something. I already run ArchiveTeam agents.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        You can mirror your own as well.

        It doesn’t have to be self hosted peertube, as long as you have auth on the peertube server and you have a high enough upload cap it will work.

        Yes, that is exactly how you’d use it, it runs on a server with some youtube channels to check periodically and some peertube accounts to mirror them to and it does it.

  • @Waitwuhtt
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    101 year ago

    I welcome the rise of their replacements.

  • @adibis
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    81 year ago

    You can’t save anything unless there’s a YouTube competitor. Google can do whatever it wants.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    Nah, we’ll just switch to webscraping if APIs get locked behind a paywall. Let’s see how those sites handle it when millions of people are using a scraping based client in the future. I can imagine it feeling a lot like being the victim a relentless ddos attack.

    • @scarilog
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      111 year ago

      This is exactly what the proposed Web Integrity API seeks to prevent. That’s what makes it terrifying.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Hmm, so no API, no scraping, nothing but some ad infested privacy invading unusable mess. I guess isolating from the whole web is becoming an increasingly appealing option.

      • DarkenLM
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        21 year ago

        Show me me a 10ft wall, I’ll show you a 12ft ladder.

        No matter what they try, there will always be someone that manages to completely bypass those bullshit blocks.

  • @TheKarion
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    deleted by creator

    • @[email protected]OP
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      21 year ago

      But at the same time, not enough people use 3rd party YouTube apps to cause any significant backlash if they deny api access

      • @TheKarion
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        deleted by creator