This week YouTube hosted Brandcast 2025 in which it revealed how marketers could make better use of the platform to connect with customers.
A few new so-called innovations were announced at the event but one has caught the attention of the internet – Peak Points. This new product makes use of Gemini to detect “the most meaningful, or ‘peak’, moments within YouTube’s popular content to place your brand where audiences are the most engaged”.
Essentially, YouTube will use Gemini and probably the heatmap generated on YouTube videos by people skipping to popular points, to determine where to place advertising. Anybody who has grown up watching terrestrial television where adverts arrive as a way to build suspense will understand how annoying Peak Points could become.
But even running an indexer on a YT-like scale would need serious money, even if you spread the hosting and streaming load around.
True but probably doable since it would be way smaller.
And for most users, this would not be attractive, as you probably would have to torrent the data first and view it later.
That’s a good observation.
Then there is the issue with responsibility. If someone throws e.g. CSAM into the system, who could be held responsible?
The uploader. But I get that could be difficult.
Who would have to deal with DMCA notices?
Only the ones where the DMCA is valid. Which means US.
Who would deal with issues like “Dictator X demands all videos showing him in a bad light to be removed immediately!”
Do you realize that in many place such a request could be simply ignored until the dictator X does not get and order by a judge ?
Not to say that these are not real problems, but a distributed system is much more resilient to them, with the good and bad implications associated.And: Opening a payment system is a serious can of worms, especially if you need it to work internationally.
That’s a point that is more problematic since such system could|should not use something like paypal or similar services.