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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • Creators at all sizes rely very heavily on ad revenue! Most youtube channels cannot just turn monetization off and keep operating. Small channels will earn very little in the way of merch (if they’re big enough yet for merch at all), large channels have more expenses (like Linus Tech Tips who, last time their earnings were disclosed, still earned one THIRD of their revenue from adsense) such as studios and a production team.

    I don’t see how most 'tubers are supposed to survive without the ad money at all, most could tank a bit of a dip as that has happened before, but turning it off is basically not feasible.

    I, for one, enjoy the fruits of their hard work, whatever their genre of content is, and think they should be duely compensated.



  • It’s because google has effectively unlimited resources and first-adopter advantage combined. The people who originally made youtube in 2005 would have never made money from it, even though the max upload quality was 240p (I remember when 480 on youtube was still considered high quality lol). But they got an audience which is what mattered. When google bought them, they still couldn’t make money, but they could prevent ANYONE else making money with a similar product but throwing enough money and creator-focused policy around to make any other platform look just plain stupid. Even today, how much do you think it costs to store and serve the hundreds of thousands of videos uploaded to YT a DAY? Many of them at 4K res or even 4K60hz??? It’s a massive undertaking and nobody can afford to build a competitor. And without youtube, the internet would be a much much smaller place.


  • In this case though, would it not be that then if Facebook did have a processing agreement with Amazon with which they communicate information, and this agreement stipulates that (in order to comply with GDPR) data they sell to amazon must be deleted upon request, and Amazon does NOT do so, this would make amazon liable for breach of contract instead of facebook being liable for breach of GDPR?

    If so, all fediverse instances would need is a copy-paste agreement when two instances federate that data from one must be deleted on the other upon request.


  • it can’t make it impossible. If facebook sold data to amazon, so now amazon has a copy, and then facebook’s user asks their data to be deleted, facebook can’t just march into amazon’s servers and delete the data themselves. The best they can do is send a formal notice to amazon requesting it be deleted, which sounds like what lemmy does. At this point it’s up to the federated server if they comply with the law…