Thursday 27 April 2023

YouTube manipulation

Google sais:
There are at least 800 million videos on YouTube and quite possibly many more than this. It's actually hard to quantify exactly how much video is on YouTube in total, since more content is being uploaded constantly.
And Google sais, too:
Around 3.7m new videos are uploaded to YouTube every day – that's around 271,330 hours of video content based on an average length of 4.4 minutes.

And we all see only six on the first screen.

Beside contracts to buy a spot among these six first row or second and so on, there are some that will try to manipulate the automatic selection part of the YouTube system.
This does harm YouTube as a company, because nobody watches the adverts YouTube has as a revenue stream and also misses out on contant placement contract income.

Beside killing the talented proud few off the corpo contract world that have a special enriching view, for all, corpo, ads, creators, consumers. Such as me...

The only way to manipulate an algorythm that is known to be valuing successful content even higher, believing that the herd has a collective mind qualifying quality is by fake accounts adding to the herd.
To do so it needs a system of bots with different IP addresses...
...using the same accounts for several supported chanells that most likely already have a placement contract, which is not good enough on its own.

They will use most likely a bot network from affiliated office computers to stay uncovered. If there is such a network, it must be from a major company having several thousand officer workers all in a remote maintained network, that is no friend to the Google Inc owning YouTube uwilling to share on content placement contracts anymore than needed.

But, they will have awekward watch times relative to their fixed IP addresses dedicated to their major stock exchange listed company, using all the same accounts watching creators from the all same marketing company whos owners meet on the big players running an office company garden party some times.

Noone in a call center on the phone listens to music at all, no project manager watches a commentary except after lunch or on a business trip in the hotel most certainly not during usual business hours and not always the same set of YouTubers in especially the same time frame after published with the all same colleagues at the very same time.

But than, Sherlock ain no IT corpo guy, was he, "Sherlock"? 

#cyberpunkcoltoure #2hardcore4u