haswell 4 days ago

It’s an 8 minute video…and even shorter at 1.5X that will take me longer to summarize than you to watch.

But in summary, YouTube is rolling out AI summarization features on some content without giving creators any say in the matter.

Concerns include:

- Low quality summarization of high quality content will devalue the content, and in many cases is just a worse version of the content

- Impact to watch time on the channel can impact channel success over time

- YouTube is not doing anything to compensate creators for reducing watch time such as sharing revenue from viewers who primarily interact with the AI summary

But I think he articulates this much better than I did. Much better to watch the video.

2
solardev 4 days ago

Thanks, I appreciate that!

FWIW, unfortunately, I think the problem is a two-headed one, and maybe reversed for viewers vs creators. Creators want as many people to see their work as possible. But viewers have to sift through a graveyard of 95%+ junk videos to find the 5% worth watching. AI (or Google/TikTok/etc. in general) acting as gatekeeper in between isn't great, but not having any metrics/summaries/descriptions for videos would be even worse.

In this particular case, I get that this particular creator might've had a point to make, but the description and summary were so cheekily written (to make a point, I guess) that I had no idea what it was about.

The creators who I do follow typically make long-form educational videos with a lot of nuance; I wouldn't want to rely on even the best-written human summary for those. But there are many, many videos for which I'd prefer a 1-sentence summary over 3 minutes of intros and jokes, a 45-second sponsorship, and a gradual dramatic buildup before getting to the point.

Not sure what the long-term solution is.

haswell 2 days ago

> In this particular case, I get that this particular creator might've had a point to make, but the description and summary were so cheekily written (to make a point, I guess) that I had no idea what it was about.

This is totally fair. I watch quite a bit of his educational content on cameras so I already trusted him enough to watch past the preamble. When this thread came up it was the first video that came to mind since I’d recently watched it. I can totally see how it’d be a bit less effective for someone not already familiar with his stuff.

I also agree with the general theme of your last paragraph. For the most part, I’ll avoid channels that are primarily fluff, or skip through the preamble if it’s a creator that I begrudgingly follow because they make good - if unnecessarily fluffy at times - content.

Also not sure what the long term solution is. I do tend to believe Google’s approach with this YouTube feature isn’t it.

seventh12 4 days ago

The videos are the intellectual property of the creator, and YouTube has the rights to distribute and make money off of it for hosting it for you to billions of users. What's the problem? The creator can take their content somewhere else or host it themselves on their website

haswell 3 days ago

If the building I live in implements policies that are hostile to their tenants, that's their right and I can choose to move, but it's still hostile.

For sake of argument, let's say that this feature causes a 20% reduction in video views.

This feature is part of YouTube Premium, meaning that YouTube is making money on it, but in its current form the creator is not. So in essence, YouTube has chosen to take the creator's content, create derivative content based on it, and make money off of that derivative content while removing some portion of the creator's revenue. In most contexts, this would be described as theft, and I think that's a fair word to use here even if I'm sure the T&C covers it somewhere.

> What's the problem? The creator can take their content somewhere else or host it themselves on their website

You don't see a problem with a move like this? Obviously creators can move elsewhere, but it's a hostile move on YouTube's part nonetheless.