I know of peertube, which is similar to youtube.

But is there anything that is similar to instgram reels, tiktok type stuff.

I imagine it doesn’t exist because the hosting costs would be exorbitant, but I’m curious incase something like it does?

  • delirious_owl@discuss.online
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    2 months ago

    Meanwhile I want more Foss video host services that do have ads. If I’m going to be archiving video footage somewhere, I want to know they can pay their bills

    • communism@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Well with short form videos your feed could be something more like a Twitter feed where you scroll through content from the accounts you follow instead of a grid of recommended videos where you click on one that sparks your interest. It is a different experience. Just like you could have a blog where every post is under 140 characters but why do that when you could just use Twitter. (disclaimer I do not claim to understand what has happened with X/Twitter now just assume I’m talking about old Twitter lol)

    • firewood010@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      The difference is in the user demographic. You can’t have an algorithm to satisfy both the YouTube audience and the TikTok audience.

  • John Colagioia@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 months ago

    I can’t vouch for anything about it, since I’ve never done more than look and bookmark the page, but Vidzy at least exists and has an instance that plays one short video…

    • noodlejetski@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      I love stux, I have a Mastodon account on one of his instances, and I donate every now and then. he’s a good human being, and his cats are supreme.

      that being said, I feel like sometimes he’s a bit ADHD with his side projects, so he creates one, and then just lets it fizzle out over time while he starts two new ones. goldfish.social was one of them, and it looks like the domain has expired and got bought out by someone else. perhaps it’s his way of learning new stuff, or preventing himself on getting burned out or something - whichever it is, I’m not judging, he’s never making promises that they’re long term commitments anyway. his Masto instances have been solid, on the other hand.

    • Kraiden@kbin.earth
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      2 months ago

      Developer bailed on it, and it got dumped on someone without the resources to carry on with it, so they’ve put it into maintenance mode until February next year IIRC? Then it will be gone.

      Honestly I’m just glad they’re actually doing the maintenance thing instead of just vanishing overnight, or just leaving everything in limbo, which seems to be a problem in this space.

      None of that is correct. I was thinking of Firefish

  • foremanguy@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Dont know if it’s a good idea to implement that in anyways, shorts/verticals formats are not meant to be profitable to people, too short to learn anything only to make money of it

    • infeeeee@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      IIRC Vine and Coub made it mainstream more than 12 years ago, it’s not something new. Gifs ate basically a prequel of the format.

      If people wouldn’t like it, it wouldn’t survive this long, and wouldn’t be copied by every other company and requested in threads like this. It’s alright if you don’t like them but please let other people have fun. You don’t have to “learn” from everything, it’s just jokes and light entertainment.

        • infeeeee@lemm.ee
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          2 months ago

          The announcement comes after Twitter announced across-the-board job cuts earlier on Thursday, with plans to lay off 9 percent of its workforce, which equals about 350 people. The company also said in a letter to shareholders that it was going to prioritize some parts of its business, while deprioritizing others.

          Source

          Twitter was financially in a bad shape for a long time, the first year they generated some profit was 2018. Source Vine existed 2012-2017, I think they couldn’t figure out how to monetize it. Twitter was a text based platform, tiktok was designed for video from conception.

          But I still don’t know why they didn’t try to sell it instead of shutting it down.

          Coub was also nearly shut down in 2022, it seems like it’s hard to profitably maintain a short video service.

          One more thing could have an important impact was music rights. Tiktok has special deals with record labels for background music, Coub was Russian, so they could just pirate music. Streaming wasn’t big back than, only spotify existed, labels couldn’t figure yet out how to milk internet users, so I guess Vine couldn’t get as good deals as it would now. Too early, too legal.

        • firewood010@lemmy.zip
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          2 months ago

          TikTok’s algorithm. It does a lot of things against modern morals but people inherently like them. It is not inclusive and pro-erotic. And ease of use too. Plus state funded money.

      • Luke@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        I’m not necessarily disagreeing with your overall point here (I have no idea why people engage with shorts, maybe they do love that format) but I wanted to push back a little on the idea that a product must be popular simply because corporations continue to offer them. Especially with social media, where users are actively discouraged from making their own decisions as much as possible by The Algorithm.

        I think there are plenty of examples of things that people continue to use (and often even pay for the “privilege”) despite major aspects of those things being generally reviled by everyone who uses them:

        • ad infested apps and websites
        • gaming microtransactions
        • a new phone every year
        • cable service
        • insurance
        • HOAs
        • gasoline
        • Amazon
        • pants and dresses without pockets