I don't know about that. I'm a sync user and some of the foss options are very good by now. I use sync because of familiarity and I like the dev so don't mind dropping some money to support him.
As much as I don't love advertising, it's mainly just the big corporations that wouldn't care about a bit of a price lift. Small businesses will be hit disproportionately.
Both are totally legitimate interpretations. It doesn't specify what they're talking about beyond "people in China" which can either mean individually or collectively. It's meant to be a trick question, though, which is why it's worded so ambiguously.
You've basically said the same thing over and over about four or five times now. And been shut down on the facts of it every single time. Aren't you getting a little tired of that?
Yes, I am getting tired. You consistently argue against the pretty inoffensive and commonly understood arguments I have made with completely irrelevant points. So I'll say it one more time and see if it can finally sink in. If someone wants to get into making videos, they'll go to youtube for better or for worse. I'm not arguing about the pros and cons of Google's influence, I'm saying that the reality is that youtube has enabled a huge amount of people to monetize their video creation and build an audience in a way that other competitors haven't caught up with. If you're arguing that the landscape for video creation and publishing on the internet is the same as it was before youtube rose to prevalence, then you're just dead wrong. Sorry.
Also, you do understand that youtube was more successful than vimeo before google's acquisition, right? Their success is kind of the whole reason google backed them.
Yes, but the backing by Google turned it into a viable career path for many creators. Name a single creator who posts to vimeo as their full time job. I'm not saying that youtube's rise in popularity was necessarily good or ethical, I'm just saying that it is objectively better for creators over the other options.
I'm not saying people didn't share videos beforehand, but youtube created a platform that allowed people to do it more easily, be discovered more easily, and actually make a decent living through it. The internet landscape, especially in respect to influencers or content creators, is entirely different now than it was in the 90's.
It's legal in MA. I was paid double once and they took it back. I looked into it and sure enough, it's totally legal as long as it's within a certain timeframe.
Creators would exist without the platform. They always have.
Not sure what you mean with this. Youtube has allowed anyone with a camera and an internet connection to put content out in the world. It was completely different back before youtube existed.
Huh? I mean I'd argue that the local authorities have the most responsibility in this case. I don't really think google is too responsible here. I guess you could make an argument that people tried reporting it but ultimately the local authorities should have clearly blocked it off. It's really no different than using an old physical map; it shows you the way but things change so you always need to use discretion. I can't count how many times I've followed my GPS only to be blocked by construction or something along those lines. In those situations, there needs to be clear signage or a barricade which is basically what I'm arguing is applicable here.
i seriously doubt that he saw that the bridge was out, and then chose to trust the gps anyway
Well yeah, in the article it says that visibility was bad. I was more just making the point that discretion is important when using a GPS. That said, I'd say that the local authorities fucked up the most. A bridge collapsed a decade ago and it's not blocked off? It should be obvious that you can't drive that way.
Tech bros have a boner for LLM AIs. They don't have anything to lose from the development of these AIs, so they don't seem to understand the concerns of people who do.
On top of this, it's becoming increasingly clear that many tech bros have never been genuinely moved by a piece of art whether it's visual or written so they genuinely don't understand that AI art is devoid of any real emotional impact. AI art just throws together cliches. It reminds me of that shitty AI generated conversation between Plato and Bill Gates when were so many tech bros talking about how "inspiring" it was.
Don't get me wrong, I love these AI tools coming out but they're so over hyped sometimes.
Literally no one on the face of the earth has ever said that. We're actually talking about an app that has a paid option without ads.