I switched over since I heard it was more privacy friendly than YouTube and have been using the platform for a while without issues, but this cookie banner just popped up. You can opt-out of things like “Access precise geolocation data” but a lot of other information is still shared by third parties and not opt-outable.

It seems “Reject All” is the correct choice here, but I’m not sure if it is the best choice for browser users who have to constantly log back into their accounts.

  • @GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml
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    385 months ago

    There are no other big platforms. There was a very extensive discussion about it recently. Making a service like YouTube is extremely expensive and not even very profitable. YouTube exists because Google has the resources to maintain it and it’s too important for everyone to shut it down.

    You can either use YouTube with a ton of privacy hardening (using a private browser or a VPN) or host videos on your own website.

      • @GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        Wait I thought you wanted to make videos. If not then there are various YouTube frontends with various levels of privacy. I use Piped/LibreTube but it’s probably the least convenient one out there. You can just use a VPN tbh.

      • @Damage@feddit.it
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        135 months ago

        YouTube was Google’s competitor, or rather the other way around. Then Google bought them. I can imagine they’d do that to others if they could.

    • atro_city
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      -85 months ago

      Content creators have to earn money somehow. But the fediverse seems very against capitalism, so I don’t know how it will attract people who want to make a living creating content if everybody tells them it’s wrong.

      • @TheSun@slrpnk.net
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        75 months ago

        There’s nothing stopping creators from doing sponsored videos and/or sharing their liberapay/opencollective/patreon on peertube, they even provide a dedicated place for it.

        Most of the youtubers I follow claim YouTube’s direct compensation makes up very little of their overall income, especially since YouTube keeps lowering the compensation/demonetizing everything. Most of their income comes from sponsored videos, patreons, and merch sales. Maybe it depends on the youtuber but it seems consistent with those I follow.