YouTube
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
YouTube, LLC | |
---|---|
Type | Subsidiary of Google |
Founded | 2005 |
Headquarters | San Bruno, California, U.S. |
Key people | Steve Chen, Founder & CTO Chad Hurley, Founder & CEO Jawed Karim, Founder & Advisor |
Owner | Google Inc. |
Slogan | Broadcast Yourself |
Website | YouTube.com list of localized domain names |
Type of site | Video hosting service |
Advertising | Google, AdSense |
Registration | Optional (required to upload and to comment on videos) |
Available in | 12 languages |
Launched | February 15, 2005 |
Current status | Active |
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YouTube is a video sharing website where users can upload, view and share video clips. YouTube was created in mid-February 2005 by three former PayPal employees.[1] The San Bruno-based service uses Adobe Flash technology to display a wide variety of user-generated video content, including movie clips, TV clips and music videos, as well as amateur content such as videoblogging and short original videos. In October 2006, Google Inc. announced that it had reached a deal to acquire the company for US$1.65 billion in Google stock. The deal closed on November 13, 2006.[2]
Unregistered users can watch most videos on the site, while registered users are permitted to upload an unlimited number of videos. Some videos are available only to users of age 18 or older (e.g. videos containing potentially offensive content). The uploading of videos containing pornography, nudity, defamation, harassment, commercial advertisements and material encouraging criminal conduct is prohibited. Related videos, determined by title and tags, appear onscreen to the right of a given video. In YouTube's second year, functions were added to enhance user ability to post video 'responses' and subscribe to content feeds.
Few statistics are publicly available regarding the number of videos on YouTube. However, in July 2006, the company revealed that more than 100 million videos were being watched every day, and 2.5 billion videos were watched in June 2006. 50,000 videos were being added per day in May 2006, and this increased to 65,000 by July.[3] In January 2008 alone, nearly 79 million users watched over 3 billion videos on YouTube.[4]
In August 2006, The Wall Street Journal published an article revealing that YouTube was hosting about 6.1 million videos (requiring about 45 terabytes of storage space), and had about 500,000 user accounts.[5] As of April 9, 2008, a YouTube search returns about 83.4 million videos and 3.75 million user channels.[6][7]
YouTube is currently not profitable, with its revenues being noted as "immaterial" by Google in a regulatory filing.[4] Its bandwidth costs are estimated at approximately $1 million a day.[4] It is estimated that in 2007, YouTube consumed as much bandwidth as the entire Internet in 2000, and that around ten hours of video are uploaded every minute. [8][9]
Contents |
History
Domain name problem
YouTube's immense success unintentionally affected the business of an American company, Universal Tube & Rollform Equipment Corp., whose original website address, utube.com, was at one time frequently overloaded and shut down by high numbers of visitors unsure about the spelling of YouTube's domain name.[10] At the beginning of November 2006, Universal Tube filed suit in federal court against YouTube,[11] requesting that the youtube.com domain be transferred to them.[12] As of May 2008, the web address utube.com is inactive, while Universal Tube & Rollform Equipment has moved to utubeonline.com. According to a WHOIS domain name search, Universal Tube still owns the domain http://www.utube.com.[13]
Social impact
Before the launch of YouTube in 2005, there were few simple methods available for ordinary computer users who wanted to post videos online. With its easy to use interface, YouTube made it possible for anyone who could use a computer to post a video that millions of people could watch within a few minutes. The wide range of topics covered by YouTube has turned video sharing into one of the most important parts of Internet culture.
An early example of the social impact of YouTube was the success of the Bus Uncle video in 2006. It shows an animated conversation between a youth and an older man on a bus in Hong Kong, and was discussed widely in the mainstream media.[14] Another YouTube video to receive extensive coverage is guitar, which features a performance of Pachelbel's Canon on an electric guitar. The name of the performer is not given in the video, and after it received millions of views the New York Times revealed the identity of the guitarist as Jeong-Hyun Lim, a 23-year-old from South Korea who had recorded the track in his bedroom. [15]
Terms of service
According YouTube's terms of service,[16] users may upload videos only with permission of the copyright holder and people depicted in the videos. Pornography, nudity, defamation, harassment, commercial advertisements and material encouraging criminal conduct are prohibited. The uploader grants YouTube a license to distribute and modify the uploaded material for any purpose; this license terminates when the uploader deletes the material from the site. Users may view videos on the site as long as they agree to the terms of service; downloading through one's own means or copying of the videos is not permitted.
- Further information: Censorship by Google#YouTube
Criticism
YouTube has been criticized frequently for failing to ensure that its online content adheres to the law of copyright. At the time of uploading a video, YouTube users are shown a screen with the following message:
Do not upload any TV shows, music videos, music concerts or commercials without permission unless they consist entirely of content you created yourself. The Copyright Tips page and the Community Guidelines can help you determine whether your video infringes someone else's copyright.
Despite this advice, there are still many unauthorized clips from television shows, films and music videos on YouTube. YouTube does not view videos before they are posted online, and it is left to copyright holders to issue a takedown notice under the terms of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Organizations including Viacom and the English Premier League have issued lawsuits against YouTube, claiming that it has done too little to prevent the uploading of copyrighted material.[17][18] Viacom, demanding $1 billion in damages, said that it had found more than 150,000 unauthorized clips of its material on YouTube that had been viewed "an astounding 1.5 billion times". YouTube responded by stating that it "goes far beyond its legal obligations in assisting content owners to protect their works". Since Viacom issued its lawsuit, YouTube has introduced a system of digital fingerprints that checks uploaded videos against the original content as a means of reducing copyright violation.[19][20]
YouTube has also faced criticism over the offensive content in some of its videos. Although YouTube's terms of service forbid the uploading of material likely to be considered inappropriate or defamatory, the inability to check all videos before they go online means that occasional lapses are inevitable. Controversial areas for videos have included Holocaust denial and the Hillsborough Disaster, in which 96 football fans from Liverpool were crushed to death in 1989.[21][22]
Blocking
YouTube has been blocked in several countries since its inception, including Tunisia, Thailand (which has since been lifted) and Iran. Certain video pages were banned as of October 1, 2007 in Turkey, but this was lifted two days later. More recently on January 22, 2008 Turkey banned YouTube once again but this ban was lifted after three days. Certain pages are also banned in United Arab Emirates.
On February 23, 2008, Pakistan blocked YouTube due to "offensive material" towards the Islamic faith, including the display of pictures of the prophet Muhammad.[23] This action by the Pakistani authorities led to a near global blackout of the YouTube site for at least two hours.[24] Thousands of Pakistanis undermined the 3-day block using a VPN software called Hotspot Shield.[25] The YouTube ban was lifted on February 26, 2008 after the "offensive material" were removed from the site.[26]
Schools in certain countries have begun to block access to YouTube due to students uploading videos of bullying behavior, school fights and racist behavior as well as increased bandwidth usage and other inappropriate content.[27]
Spamming
With recent improvements to e-mail spam filtering technology and their wider use, spammers have begun using YouTube as way to advertise: popular videos frequently have comments with links to irrelevant external sites, usually with some enticing statements (such as "Great video, go to <site> for the full version"). To counter this, YouTube has blocked comments with URLs in them since late 2006; if a user tries to post a comment with a URL, it will be discarded and will not show up. As of August 2007, this "feature" seems to have been extended to profile comments as well, although the user will receive an ambiguous "error processing your comment" message. However, posting links is still possible in bulletins, private messages, or group discussions. Also, if a user posts many comments in a short period, they may be asked to complete a CAPTCHA, which was implemented when a notorious spammer abused the lack of a flood control. However, the lack of a CAPTCHA is still present in some areas of the site, particularly in sharing playlists, which has the problem of flooding people's e-mails and sending out "ghost videos." Other examples of spammers include users who use non-related-to-video threats (including "Post this message to <number> friends or your mom will die in <number> hours") They may also send messages to a user's inbox (essentially in the form of a plain-text spam email). Some of these spam accounts also posted pornographic videos on YouTube. A slightly newer feature of YouTube is the ability to send invites to people through email by using the "Invite Your Friends" feature. Originally, this feature was indeed a useful feature to build a bigger community using YouTube. When spammers became aware of this, they decided to give it a try and found every email address possible to send random email invites. More so, they've now been able to cheat the system even more.
“ | The messages came from service@youtube.com. [...] The messages look like a legitimate YouTube invite, except they include typical spam content like stock pump-and-dump promotions and links to spam Web sites. Many of them use Microsoft's recent XBox 360 hit "Halo 3" as bait, telling the recipient they have won a free copy of the game and to go to a Web site. If they take the bait and click on "winhalo3.com," the Web site infects them with the Storm Worm, which has been hanging around since August.[28] | ” |
Spammers have used this route more often nowadays because they can use it to defeat spam filters, gain more readers and possibly customers. "They just do as all spammers do..."
Technical notes
Video format
YouTube's video playback technology is based on Macromedia's Flash Player. This technology allows the site to display videos with quality comparable to more established video playback technologies (such as Windows Media Player, QuickTime and RealPlayer) that generally require the user to download and install a web browser plugin in order to view video. Flash also requires a plug-in, but Adobe considers the Flash 7 plug-in to be present on about 90% of online computers.[29] Users can view videos in windowed mode or full screen mode and it is possible to switch modes during playback without reloading it due to the full-screen function of Adobe Flash Player 9. The video can also be played back with third-party media players such as GOM Player, gnash, VLC as well as some ffmpeg-based video players.
Videos uploaded to YouTube are limited to ten minutes in length [30], and a file size of 1024MB (1 Gigabyte). One video at a time can be uploaded through the standard interface, and multiple videos can be uploaded with a Windows based plugin. [31] YouTube converts videos into the Flash Video format after uploading.[32] YouTube also converts content to other formats so that it can be viewed outside of the website (see below).
YouTube accepts uploaded videos in the .WMV, .AVI, .MOV, MPEG and .MP4 formats. It also supports 3GP, allowing videos to be uploaded directly from a mobile phone.[33]
Standard and high quality videos
A standard quality YouTube video has a picture 320 pixels wide by 240 pixels high, and uses the Sorenson Spark H.263 video codec. The bit rate of the video signal is around 314 kbit/s with a frame rate dependent on the uploaded video.[34]
In March 2008, YouTube launched a feature which allowed some of its videos to be viewed in 'High Quality' format. This format offers the possibility of better video definition (480x360 pixels instead of the standard 320x240 pixels) for any video uploaded after this date. YouTube decides which videos are capable of this improved quality based on the standard of the original upload. Users can choose "always show me higher quality when available" on their video quality settings page in their account pages to switch automatically to the better quality.
YouTube's high quality videos are available in two versions, both of which have a picture size of 480 x 360 pixels. By adding &fmt=6 to the web address of a video, it is played using the H.263 codec with mono sound, and by adding &fmt=18 it is played using the H.264/MPEG-4 AVC codec with stereo AAC sound. [35]
Asked why YouTube did not choose HD format, the site answered : "Our general philosophy is to make sure that as many people as possible can access YouTube and that videos start quickly and play smoothly. That's one reason why you don't see us racing to call this "Super Duper YouTube HD," because most people don't want to wait a long time for videos to play."[36]
Audio format
Standard quality YouTube videos contain an MP3 audio stream. By default, it is encoded in mono at a bit rate of 64 kbit/s sampled at 22050 Hz, giving an audio bandwidth of around 10 kHz. The default bit rate delivers passable but not hi-fi audio quality. It is possible for a standard quality YouTube video to have a stereo audio track if the movie file is converted to FLV format prior to upload. This can be done with programs including ffmpeg for Linux and Windows, ffmpegX for Macintosh or the commercial Riva FLV Encoder for Windows. [37]
Content accessibility
On YouTube
YouTube accepts common video file formats and converts them to Flash Video in order to make them available for online viewing. Since June 2007, newly uploaded videos have also been encoded using the H.264 video standard to enable streaming of YouTube videos on the Apple TV, iPhone, and iPod touch.
On Apple TV
Apple Inc. announced on 20 June 2007 that YouTube is accessible on the Apple TV after installation of a free software update. Functionality includes browsing by category, searching videos, and the ability for members to log onto their YouTube accounts directly on Apple TV. Access to thousands of the most current and popular YouTube videos are available, and there were plans to add thousands more videos each week. The entire catalog was targeted to be available in fall 2007. According to Apple VP David Moody, the reason for the delay was the need for all current YouTube content to be transcoded to Apple's preferred video standard, H.264.
On mobile
YouTube launched its mobile site, YouTube Mobile on 15 June 2007. It is based on xHTML and uses 3GP videos with H.263/AMR codec and RTSP streaming. It is available via a web interface at m.youtube.com or via YouTube's Mobile Java Application.
On TV
YouTube TV Channel is on Information TV 2, and it started January 7, 2008. The channel is airing video sharing content from the YouTube website.
On iPhone and iPod touch
Apple announced Wednesday, 20 June 2007 that YouTube would be available on iPhone at launch. Streaming is over WiFi or EDGE.
Videos on YouTube for the iPhone are encoded in Apple's preferred H.264 format. All videos are viewed in the horizontal orientation of the phone. As YouTube videos have 4:3 aspect ratio and the iPhone is 3:2, videos must be viewed with black bars on the side (pillarboxed) or may be zoomed to trim some of the top and bottom to fill the screen.
Not all videos were available on iPhone initially because not every video was reencoded to H.264. There are two versions of each video on YouTube, one is higher bandwidth for WiFi use, and one is lower resolution for EDGE use.
Unlike the Apple TV version, users cannot log in to their own YouTube accounts, but can create a separate favorites list just for the iPhone.
Outside YouTube
Each YouTube video is accompanied by a piece of HTML markup which can be used to link to the video or embed it on a page outside the YouTube website, unless the submitter of a video chooses to disable the feature. A small addition to the markup allows the video to play automatically when the webpage loads. These options are especially popular with users of social networking sites. YouTube videos can also be accessed via a gadget which is available for the iGoogle homepage. [38]
YouTube videos are designed to be viewed while connected to the internet, and no official feature allows for them to be downloaded and viewed offline. [39] However, a number of third-party web sites, applications and browser extensions (such as Firefox extensions) exist for this purpose. [40]. Alternatively, .flv files can be copied from the 'Temporary Internet Files' folder in Windows, or the /tmp directory in GNU systems, to a permanent folder. The .flv files can then be viewed and edited directly or converted to other formats using various applications such as VLC media player.
Annotations
In June 2008, YouTube launched a beta test of Annotations, which can display notes or links within a video. Annotations allow for information to be added, for example stories with multiple possibilities (viewers click to choose the next scene), and links to other YouTube videos. Annotations are currently available only on the English language YouTube and will not appear on videos embedded outside the YouTube website. [41] [42]
Localization
On June 19, 2007, Eric E. Schmidt was in Paris to launch the new localization system. The entire interface of the website is now available with localized versions in numerous countries:
Google aims to compete with local video-sharing websites like DailyMotion in France. It also made an agreement with local television stations like M6 and France Télévisions to legally broadcast video content.
On October 17, 2007 it was announced that a Hong Kong version had been launched. YouTube's Steve Chen said its next target will be Taiwan.[50][51]
On October 22, 2007 YouTube New Zealand had its launch party, stating that its aim was to help create YouTube celebrities within New Zealand. This was quickly evident with the rise of such New Zealand YouTube shows as Three Best Friends That Live Together and LiveFromJoes.
YouTube has been subject to threats of censorship by various countries because of the content it hosts. It was blocked from Mainland China from the 18th October due to the censorship of the Taiwanese flag. URLs to YouTube were redirected to China's own search engine, Baidu. It was subsequently unblocked on the 31st of October.[52]
Channel type
Members of YouTube.com are offered to be a part of groups called "Channel Types" that make their channel more distinctive. At one time, when you signed up for a Director account setting, you were offered to have unlimited video length, but that is no longer offered, although the users who joined the "Director" group during that time still have that unlimited video length setting. At that time, they were still also limited to 100MB in video size, but now these accounts are limited to 1024 MB. The types are:
- YouTuber, a general viewer of YouTube.
- Director, movie makers displaying their videos for YouTube viewers.
- Musician, musicians or bands covering songs or displaying originals or giving lessons on songs, scales, chords, etc.
- Comedian, comedians displaying their comedy bits for YouTube viewers.
- Guru, people who are experienced in a certain field make videos of what they do.
- Non-profit, a status obtained by 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations accepted into YouTube's non-profit program.
- Reporter, civilians or professionals who make videos about local or international news and current events.
Video rankings
YouTube awards videos with honors, the most popular of which is "most viewed"[53] which are divided into four categories: today, this week, this month and all time. Honors include:
- Most Viewed
- Top Rated
- Most Discussed
- Top Favorites
- Most Linked
- Recently Featured
- Most Responded
YouTube Video Awards
In 2006, YouTube presented the annual YouTube Video Awards.[54] Categories include "'most adorable video ever" and "most creative." YouTube nominates the contenders, and users decide the winners. Only original, user created videos are nominated. Nominees for the 2006 awards included Peter Oakley (geriatric1927), LonelyGirl15, thewinekone, Renetto, Nezzomic, and Chad Vader.[55][56]
Recent events
Political campaigning
Political candidates for the 2008 U.S. Presidential election have been using YouTube as an outlet for advertising their candidacies. Voters can view candidate statements and make videos supporting (or opposing) presidential candidates (e.g., videos for Ron Paul, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden).[57] [58] Third Party presidential candidates have also made extensive use of YouTube. Libertarian Steve Kubby's campaign debuted a short animated film, featuring the faces and voices of campaign contributors who financed its production, on YouTube on September 29th, 2007.[59] The U.S. media has often commented that YouTube played a significant role in the 2006 defeat of Republican Senator George Allen due to a video clip of him making allegedly racist remarks that was continuously replayed by YouTube viewers during the campaign.[60] [61] [62] [63] [64] Political commentators such as James Kotecki have also joined the YouTube world of politics. Many commentators make videos on YouTube critiquing a presidential candidate's YouTube videos, or simply using YouTube as a medium to get their opinions heard. Recently, French and Italian politicians, such as Antonio Di Pietro, have also been using the site as part of their campaigns. YouTube has also been used by former Australian Prime Minister John Howard in the lead up to the 2007 federal election.
CNN-YouTube presidential debates
In the run up to the 2008 Presidential elections, CNN aired a debate in which candidates fielded questions selected from a pool submitted by users of YouTube. Because of the use of technology to aggregate questions from a wide range of constituents, the forum has been referred to as "most democratic Presidential Debate ever".[65]
April Fools'
For the 2008 April Fools' Day prank, every "Featured Video" on the front page redirected to Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up," effectively rickrolling everyone who attempted to watch a featured video on the site.[66]
See also
- Alternative media
- Comparison of video services
- List of Internet phenomena
- List of YouTube celebrities
- User-generated content
- Viral video
References
- ^ "Surprise! There's a third YouTube co-founder", USATODAY, October 11, 2006.
- ^ "Google closes $A2b YouTube deal", Reuters, November 14, 2006.
- ^ "YouTube serves up 100 million videos a day online", USA TODAY, Gannett Company, Inc, 2006-07-16. Retrieved on 2007-11-24.
- ^ a b c Yi-Wyn Yen (March 25, 2008). YouTube Looks For the Money Clip. Accessed March 26, 2008.
- ^ Gomes, Lee. "Will All of Us Get Our 15 Minutes On a YouTube Video?", The Wall Street Journal Online, Dow Jones & Company, 2006-08-30. Retrieved on 2007-11-24.
- ^ YouTube - Broadcast Yourself
- ^ YouTube - Broadcast Yourself
- ^ Web could collapse as video demand soars. Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
- ^ YouTube lawsuit threatens internet freedom, claims Google. Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-05-28.
- ^ Christian Zappone. "Help! YouTube is killing my business!: An Ohio company's sales get 'killed' as YouTube surfers cripple utube.com, a pipe equipment seller's web site." CNNMoney.com, October 12, 2006; retrieved November 17, 2006.
- ^ Rhys Blakely. "Utube sues YouTube" Times Online, November 02, 2006; retrieved November 17, 2006.
- ^ "Utube.com v. YouTube.com: Ohio pipe firm says confused web surfers are hurting its business" The Smoking Gun, November 2, 2006; retrieved November 17, 2006.
- ^ WHOIS results for www.utube.com. DomainTools. Retrieved on 2008-05-29.
- ^ Bray, Marianne. Irate HK man unlikely Web hero. CNN. Retrieved on 2008-05-28.
- ^ Heffernand, Virginia. "Web Guitar Wizard Revealed at Last", New York Times, 2006-08-27. Retrieved on 2007-07-02.
- ^ YouTube Terms of Use, accessed 5 May 2007
- ^ Viacom will sue YouTube for $1bn. BBC News. Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
- ^ Premier League to take action against YouTube. Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-05-24.
- ^ YouTube law fight 'threatens net'. BBC News. Retrieved on 2008-05-28.
- ^ What is YouTube's Video Identification tool?. YouTube. Retrieved on 2008-05-27.
- ^ YouTube criticized in Germany over anti-Semitic Nazi videos. Reuters. Retrieved on 2008-05-28.
- ^ Fury as YouTube carries sick Hillsboro video insult. icLiverpool. Retrieved on 2008-05-24.
- ^ (February 23, 2008). Access to YouTube blocked until further notice because of "non-Islamic" videos Reporters Without Borders. Accessed February 24, 2008.
- ^ (February 23, 2008). BBC News YouTube outage blamed on Pakistan Sunday, 24 February 2008, 22:38 GMT
- ^ (February 27, 2008). Pakistan web users get round YouTube ban Silicon Republic. Accessed February 27, 2008.
- ^ "Pakistan lifts YouTube ban", ABC News, 2008-02-26. Retrieved on 2008-02-26.
- ^ AustralianIT. "States still hold out on YouTube", 2007-03-06.
- ^ Internetnews: YouTube's Not-so-'Friendly' Spam
- ^ Adobe Flash Player Version Penetration Adobe
- ^ YouTube's help section states: "You can no longer upload videos longer than ten minutes regardless of what type of account you have. Users who had previously been allowed to upload longer content still retain this ability, so you may occasionally see videos that are longer than ten minutes." The ten minute limit was introduced in March 2006 after YouTube realized that the majority of videos over this length were from television shows and films.
- ^ Multi-Video Upload. YouTube. Retrieved on 2008-06-04.
- ^ Coding Horror: Did YouTube Cut the Gordian Knot of Video Codecs?
- ^ In which formats YouTube officially accepts uploaded videos
- ^ Verified by analyzing internal structure of, and playing, newly uploaded videos, 2007-11-19
- ^ Baekdal, Thomas. YouTube in High-resolution. Retrieved on 2008-06-08.
- ^ VYouTube launches HQ videos
- ^ Stereo Audio Demonstration. YouTube. Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
- ^ Official YouTube Gadget. Retrieved on 2008-06-09.
- ^ Can I download videos to watch later?. YouTube. Retrieved on 2008-06-09.
- ^ FlashLoad.net, Javimoya.com, etc.
- ^ How do I create or edit video annotations?. YouTube. Retrieved on 2008-06-04.
- ^ YouTube Annotations Demonstration. YouTube. Retrieved on 2008-06-04.
- ^ a b YouTube Launches in Australia & New Zealand
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Google launches YouTube France News - PC Advisor
- ^ YouTube Canada Now Live
- ^ YouTube Germany Launches
- ^ Chita • 檢視主題 - YouTube 台灣版推出
- ^ YouTube now has an Indian incarnation
- ^ Chita • 檢視主題 - YouTube 台灣版推出
- ^ 881903.com Commercial Radio
- ^ CableTV
- ^ Reference
- ^ YouTube.com. YouTube page on "most viewed". Retrieved on July 13, 2007.
- ^ youtube.com/ytawards
- ^ Coyle, Jake. "YouTube to announce awards for user video", MSNBC / Associated Press, March 19, 2007.
- ^ staff. "YouTube to present video awards", BBC News, March 19, 2007.
- ^ Tamara Lytle. "Web spurs revolution in race for president", Orlando Sentinel, 2007-04-15. Retrieved on 2007-04-28.
- ^ Jose Antonio Vargas. "'Ron Paul, who?' no longer applies GOP hopeful big hit in YouTube videos", San Francisco Chronicle, 2007-06-17. Retrieved on 2007-06-23.
- ^ Kubby for President. "Steve Kubby for President 2008", YouTube, 2007-09-29. Retrieved on 2007-09-29.
- ^ Andrew Kantor. "We would be well served to delete others' missteps in Web's archive", USA Today, 2006-11-16. Retrieved on 2007-04-28.
- ^ Carrie Budoff. "Senators Fear Having A "Macaca" Moment: Smallest Slip-Ups Can Tank A Campaign, Thanks To YouTube", CBS News, 2007-02-02. Retrieved on 2007-04-28.
- ^ Andrew Sullivan. "Video power: the potent new political force", The Sunday Times, 2007-02-04. Retrieved on 2007-04-28. "Without a hostile videocam and the blogosphere, Allen would have cruised on to victory. But the damning video found its way to YouTube, and then it was carried by the TV networks, and before long Allen’s attempt at re-election hit a brick wall."
- ^ Frank Rich. "2006: The Year of the 'Macaca'", The New York Times, 2006-11-12.
- ^ Howard Kurtz, Glenn Reynolds, Ryan Lizza, Andrea Koppel. Reliable Sources [TV-Series]. CNN Reliable Sources. "Allen used a word that some European countries consider a racial slur against an Indian-American volunteer for his Democratic opponent Jim Webb. And the web cam posted it on the popular web site YouTube.com, where it's been seen more than 100,000 times."
- ^ O'Brien, Luke (2007-06-14). YouTube and CNN Discuss "Most Democratic" Presidential Debate Ever. Wired Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-08-01.
- ^ Arrington, Michael. "YouTube RickRolls Users", TechCrunch, 2008-03-31. Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
External links
- YouTube.com
- Wikia has a wiki on this subject: Wikitubia
- YouTube Architecture
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