@RL_Dane I made an extension a while ago that does exactly that - it puts the feed icon back in the URL bar.
Plus, it renders application/rss+xml, application/atom+xml and friends in a readable way when you open a feed URL in your browser - there was a time when browsers used to handle these content types, nowadays they just return the raw XML.
It’d be interesting if the folks at @mozilla have more insights on why they decided to drop the feed icon indicator in the URL bar as well as the support for rendering feed mimetypes - and why the timing of these decisions approximately matched the timing when Chrome dropped their support for those features.
First, the technique used by these researchers to find out the actual number of videos hosted on #YouTube is definitely unorthodox (and inefficient), but it worked. Since Google won’t provide these numbers, and relying on traditional crawling techniques is likely to bring to the surface only videos that enough people have already interacted with, researchers have run an algorithm on a bunch of supercomupters that simply brute forced all the possible combinations of YouTube ID strings, and kept track of the requests that didn’t end up with a 404.
Second, even a conservative estimate of the number of videos on the platform is massive. 14 billion. Or nearly two videos for each human alive. With an unfathomably long tail.
To dig more in detail, videos with 10,000 or more views account for nearly 94% of the site’s traffic overall, but less than 4% of total uploads - a quite extreme version of the 80-20 rule. About 5% of videos have no views at all, almost 75% have no comments, and even more have no likes.
This sheds an interesting light on what YouTube actually is. Not a product that should be monetized at all costs, but a collective memory of basically all the media content that the human race has created in the past two decades. It’s vital infrastructure that should require no entry barriers, and it should be treated as such.
Most of the minutes of videos stored on YouTube’s servers aren’t from MrBeast, Veritasium or Tom Scott. They are from church services, weddings, condo-board meetings, graduation ceremonies, school lectures, and all other things that humans record and want to save on a permanent storage - for themselves, their families, their co-workers, their friends or their classmates. With absolutely no intention of monetization, wider reach, or whatever stinky corporate metrics YouTube PMs are obsessed with.
When you store most of the media content that our whole species created in the past two decades, you have a strong duty of making it accessible to everyone, all the time, with the smallest amount of friction and UX disruption. And that’s exactly the opposite of what Google has been doing lately.
I don’t see a use-case where we should keep publishing to YouTube, unless you are a professional creator with some actual following there. It should never be used for storing things to be shared only with a small circle, and even less as a permanent storage of your memories. Google can’t be trusted, and yet we’ve donated them all of our creations of the past 20 years, thinking that they’ll take care of them forever - remember the “unlimited storage, forever” promise made by GMail back in the day?
The DMA is a regulation that gives customers more choice, that enables competition again in established monopolies that most live out of collected rent, and that opens again the market of app stores, payment methods and apps business models that #Apple has been trying to consolidate and ossify since it came up with the iPhone.
After grasping all the benefits of an absolute monopoly for years, and becoming the most valued company in human history without delivering a single new innovative product in several years, a business like Apple should have the decency of just shutting up and complying.
Instead, they have the guts of coming up with an article like this that talks in terms of *new risks the DMA poses to EU users*, labels the call for more app stores, business models and payment gateways as *new avenues for malware, fraud and scams, illicit and harmful content, and other privacy and security threats*, and they say that, despite the EU's evil plans of infecting all of its citizen's phones by allowing them to download stuff outside of the App store, *Apple will continue to deliver the best, most secure experience possible for EU users*.
I'm not sure how much you must pay your marketing and PR departments for coming up with such obnoxious levels of deceit.
I guess it's again #introduction time, as I've just moved over from @blacklight. So there we go:
- 🇮🇹 geek in his mid-thirties, based in 🇳🇱
- 👔 My job involves solving problem at scale, one line of code at the time, with varying degrees of success.
- ⚙️ My hobbies often involve automating everything around me.
- :linux: #Linux user since 2001. Like many in my age group, I also used to run a forum and a wiki on an old Pentium 1 repurposed as a Slackware-based server under my bed.
- :arch: #Arch Linux and rolling release enthusiast.
- 🛠 Creator and main developer of #Platypush (https://platypush.tech), an open-source, general-purpose platform/framework to automate everything. With hundreds of available integrations, you can think of it as IFTTT+Tasker+SmartThings on steroids, scriptable, and runnable on almost any device. Or maybe like HomeAssistant's more hackish brother.
:platypush: Creator and #developer @ platypush.tech:booking: Senior #software engineer @ booking.com⚙ #Automation addict🤖 #AI builder:linux: #Linux user since 2001🔓 #FOSS contributor:arch: Prone to unsolicited "btw I use #Arch" statements🏡 #SelfHost all #tech!🔬 Open #science and open #data advocate🎶 #Music geek🎸 #Guitarist + occasional composer🛹️ #Skater🏄 #Surfer👪 #Dad of a small geek🇮🇹 ⇒ 🇳🇱