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What are the benefits of hosting your own videos? Do you think more big channels are going to start hosting own videos on their websites so that they do not have to give a cut to the networks?
Well, not necessarily. There are quite a few smaller sites that try to compete with YouTube in terms of functionality, but not in terms of traffic, of course... E.g.: Dailymotion, Vimeo, Rumble etc.Demon_Skeith said:You need bill gate's money in order to compete with youtube.
What would be the point of making videos for only a few people? Don't you want your videos to be popular, especially after you've put a lot of time and effort into filming and editing them?froggyboy604 said:I think hosting your own videos is good for protecting your privacy more since you can setup your website where only a few people with a registered password protected account can view your videos.
There are some people who rather share their videos with a few close people like family, and friends rather than with everyone because of popularity.alakazam said:What would be the point of making videos for only a few people? Don't you want your videos to be popular, especially after you've put a lot of time and effort into filming and editing them?
not everyone can become popular though. A core following though would be nice.alakazam said:What would be the point of making videos for only a few people? Don't you want your videos to be popular, especially after you've put a lot of time and effort into filming and editing them?
I agree not everyone can be popular, and a core following would be nice. You can also make people join your forum or website to watch exclusive videos which are not available on other websites like YouTube.Demon_Skeith said:not everyone can become popular though. A core following though would be nice.
Indeed, it is crazy that video is 400MB when anime is 200-300MB in size.Demon_Skeith said:Kind of crazy those are 400 MB where HD anime episodes at the most these days are 300 MB or less.
Well, popularity has its degrees of comparison. Some YouTubers are more popular than others, which - in their turn - are more popular than others etc.froggyboy604 said:I agree not everyone can be popular, and a core following would be nice.not everyone can become popular though. A core following though would be nice.
Most YouTube video makers only have a hundred to thousands or less "real" subscribers, and a lot of the subscribers just subscribe, and hope you subscribe to them, part of a subscriber exchange, or they subscribe to you because they think they get more views for their videos by subscribing to many other YouTube members. Many of the subscribers may also be bots, spammers, and internet marketing staff who don't usually watch video.alakazam said:Well, popularity has its degrees of comparison. Some YouTubers are more popular than others, which - in their turn - are more popular than others etc.
For example, compared to PewDiePie, who has 30 million subscribers, TobyGames (who has 6 million subs) is not as popular, but he is still more popular than Onision, who has 1 million subs. So we could say that Onision is not popular, but he is still more popular than someone with 10,000 subs etc.