• JordanZ@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Have you never seen this when skipping through a video? The spikes are the most watched parts. They absolutely track what individual parts of a video get the most views.

    • Noja@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      Only creators and YT know the numbers and they don’t share it.

      • zeca@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        The creators sell adventisement space and want the advertisers to know that their channel is a good investment, so the more they can prove to the advertisers that their sponsor segments arent skipped, the more they can charge for it.

      • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        It’s the default web interface - it doesn’t show on all videos, but in my experience it’s on nearly everything.

    • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      Do you have proof it harms them?

      Unless you personally click the link and sign up using code WeAreAScam at checkout, they don’t get anything extra. They already have been paid for the ad read.

      It’s like saying you’re stealing from a TV station because you took a piss during the ad break.

      • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Youtube does provide info on which portions of videos are the most watched - while most advertisers aren’t the kind of people that do due diligence, quite a few of the big management groups have started introducing contracts that base payout for sponsor reads off of actual watch count. AFAIK it hasn’t made too much of a difference yet (though channels with high skip-counts are less likely to be given the decent sponsor deals) but if youtube makes the analytics easier to access it probably will have a pretty big impact.

        • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          19 hours ago

          Youtube does provide info on which portions of videos are the most watched - while most advertisers aren’t the kind of people that do due diligence, quite a few of the big management groups have started introducing contracts that base payout for sponsor reads off of actual watch count

          If they’re that paranoid, they aren’t worth taking the money because a YouTuber forgot to include a capital letter in their pre-approved script.

            • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              19 hours ago

              If they personally scan the timeline on a video, they are the same company that gets mad at an ad being wrong because they read it as ThingLy and not Thing-ly.

              If they are that paranoid, they don’t deserve to your money.

              • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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                19 hours ago

                oh, thank you for clarifying. I’m not arguing they’re decent people - just that this sort of thing could potentially harm a creator. Unfortunately while in an ideal world creators would be able to tell the companies with this sort of overbearing contract to go fuck themselves, that’s not the one we live in. “Creators don’t have the power in the relationship: a capitalism story…”