Yes, but the content on YouTube, Vimeo, DailyMotion, etc., all tends to be either 2-7 minutes long, or pirated. Those services still haven't quite made the leap to consistently good longform video that's also legal.
Tom, I'm not sure I accept the premise that there's a dearth of good content. Purely anecdotally, I'm conscious that YouTube, not to mentio Vimeo, DailyMotion, and the rest, have all kinds of content I'd love to watch -- I just don't have time.
But I'm grateful, in any case, for your explanation of the move towards charging content providers for access to distribution. Very interesting.
Good point. So it sounds like as much a question of psychology and perception as reality, then. Ads are not perceived as paymentin the same way that cash is. Thanks!
It's more complicated to share ad revenue sources because they're not direct payments, and there's also more public understanding of the notion that if somebody "pays" for something then how that payment is divided among those who provide the something is a fair question. For example, Netflix has generated more pressure and issues in settlement than Hulu's basic service did, or than "ordinary" YouTube does.
The number of I Love Lucy reruns I'm willing to watch is none. :)
I'm wondering why charging subscriptions for content creates payment problems but ads don't. Either way, the publisher is getting paid -- either by the subscriber or by the advertiser.
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