YouTube is currently experimenting with server-side ad injection. This means that the ad is being added directly into the video stream.

This breaks sponsorblock since now all timestamps are offset by the ad times.

For now, I set up the server to detect when someone is submitting from a browser with this happening and rejecting the submission to prevent the database from getting filled with incorrect submissions.

  • @robber@lemmy.ml
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    10318 days ago

    Step by step, it seems, YouTube is evolving into something that has previously been called TV.

      • @ssm@lemmy.sdf.org
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        17 days ago

        Support a federated open source peertube instance instead of proprietary centralized paywalled garbage like Nebula. Just because the shittification isn’t there yet doesn’t mean it won’t be as soon as it gets a bit more popular.

        • @Ibuthyr@discuss.tchncs.de
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          817 days ago

          I firmly believe that quality content needs to be paid somehow. And I’d rather not have that ad based. But I’m open to other platforms too. I’m just giving this a go and there’s some good content on Nebula.

        • @Ibuthyr@discuss.tchncs.de
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          317 days ago

          I guess NotJustBikes did a good job on advertising Nebula. Thanks for the recommendation, I’m in the mood for trying alternatives. I’m even in the mood to give Linux another go because of all the bullshit MS is pulling off again.

          • @WallEx@feddit.de
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            216 days ago

            Same Herr. Notjustbikes is amazing. Also on track to try Linux again, since gaming is becoming more and more of a thing

      • @Muffi@programming.dev
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        17 days ago

        I really like the idea of Nebula, but the way they market themselves as “creator owned” without being an actual workers cooperative seems deceitful (still much better than YouTube, though!)

  • @Mikina@programming.dev
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    7618 days ago

    Looks like I’ll finally get a reason to cut off another website I hate using, but never found the willpower to get rid off.

    Good

  • @Gacrux@lemm.ee
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    7418 days ago

    does this mean stuff like yt-dlp will download videos with ads in thrm as well?

    • @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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      18 days ago

      Almost certainly not, although fair disclaimer, I don’t actually know. Ads need to be tailored to the user when delivered, so it’s likely the YouTube frontend requesting the next chunk of video to be an ad instead of the next chunk of video from blob storage. yt-dlp likely just requests successive chunks straight from blob storage, passing this.

      If YouTube served ads by saying “point to an ad chunk next” in their blob storage, 1. Everyone would see the same ad and 2. Premium users would still see ads.

      To patch this, YouTube really needs to stop serving video chunks directly from storage, but I forget the reason they haven’t done that already.

      (Technical note; I’m assuming blob storage chunks contain 1-2 seconds of video and metadata pointing to the next one, like a linked list. I’m not sure if this is how YouTube works, but many video platforms do this)

      • @ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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        918 days ago

        Ads need to be tailored to the user when delivered

        1. It does not. If you install a new browser and open YouTube the first time, they’ll be able to show ads to you
        2. They could be tailored based on other factors too, like country, region, or even household by the IP

        I think the backend could just generate the ad ridden video feed for the specific user. Most probably it would be very resource intensive, but I can only hope so… but then I also don’t know much about HLS and other fragmented streams so it might not be a performance problem at all.

        like a linked list

        I think the full list of chunks is (currently) known beforehand. That’s how yt-dlp can download on multiple threads, but also how it can show the number of total fragments relatively quickly on the progress bar

      • @Sekoia
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        618 days ago

        … which is why youtube has recently started blocking non-logged in users

        • @EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted
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          1018 days ago

          Wait, they have? I wonder how/if that would affect the functionality of apps like Newpipe/Freetube.

            • @EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted
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              18 days ago

              Gross.

              Welp, I sure hope either we stay on the winning side of the cat-and-mouse game or a lot of creators jump ship to other emerging platforms (not that there are many), because it’d be a damn shame to have to stop watching some of the creators I enjoy watching. Many of them are damned talented folks IMHO.

              I’ve heard good things about Nebula, but sadly a lot of the channels I watch are not quite on there yet. Also, I’m broke, so there’s that. Lol.

        • @Zorsith
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          18 days ago

          Ew. I’m not entering account credentials on anything I don’t own (ie, at work to see a tutorial on something I need to learn).

      • @Gacrux@lemm.ee
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        618 days ago

        yeah that makes sense. i was thinking maybe youtube had servers to decide what chunks clients would get, maybe by looking at whether or not they are premium users first. but anyway youtube still needs a way to differentiate between ad chunks and video chunks, otherwise we would just be able to skip 10 seconds through all the ads. surely that can be exploited somehow.

  • Björn Tantau
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    6218 days ago

    I wonder how that will interoperate with timestamps provided by users in comments or by the video creator themselves. Maybe those can be used to detect inserted ads.

    • ayaya
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      2118 days ago

      I have actually been seeing some timestamps that are completely wrong lately, maybe this is why.

  • LimeWire
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    5718 days ago

    I’m kinda surprised they haven’t done this already. Twitch has been doing this for a while now, and the only reliable way around it is to use a proxy in a country that Twitch doesn’t run ads in.

    • @NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      2418 days ago

      Video length is incredibly important to The Algorithm and a LOT of content creators time their videos to the second. Taking away control of that (even if the end result ins the exact same length) is going to ruffle a lot of feathers and lead to a lot of people who want to “be a champion for the viewers who should like, comment, and subscribe and use my referral code for war thunder” as a result.

      • @InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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        617 days ago

        Surely The Algorithm will not know of the ads inserted, so that won’t influence the results.

        • Wugmeister
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          217 days ago

          Never underestimate the ability of a small change to completely break a system

    • @gjghkk@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      617 days ago

      I think Twitch has gone to shit lately, because of their decisions, but I don’t know the numbers. Do you have any info about this?

      • LimeWire
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        817 days ago

        Oh, it’s been pretty crap for a while now. I constantly see viewers complain about AIDS ads and even content creators feel poorly about them.

        Looking at https://twitchtracker.com/statistics shows a relatively flat viewership base. Since January, they’ve seen a decrease of close to 15% viewers and concurrent channels. It appears that they had a large increase in viewers and channels in 2020, probably due to Covid, and since then they have been in decline.

  • recursive_recursion [they/them]
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    18 days ago

    I wonder if this is where AI might be useful where it’s used to filter out all of the megacorp ads, popups, and other random garbage?

    • train LLMs on megacorp content and use it to filter out results
      • sponsorblock adds this as a toggleable option just like the “skip segment” UI video overlay button
    • Lad
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      2218 days ago

      Using AI to fuck the megacorps would be amazing. Using their own tools against them.

      • navordar
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        817 days ago

        Even when you don’t know the language, you can judge if something is an ad just by an overly excited tone of voice. I wonder if someone has tried writing an ad detection algorithm already. It would still be a lot heavier on resources than SponsorBlock.

        • @PlexSheep@infosec.pub
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          217 days ago

          Often times that’s the case but some ads also use other tones. Trying to make a super emotional and sad story or something.

    • @FrostyCaveman@lemm.ee
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      1318 days ago

      That would be cool.

      I guess my AMD Bulldozer TV PC is gonna have to go in the ewaste bin though. Its already stretched to its limit running Linux Mint, Firefox, uBlock Origin and Sponsorblock as it is

  • I Cast Fist
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    3517 days ago

    I miss the times when ads were just annoying gifs on the left or right side of a web page. Then they evolved, abusing javascript, to become pop ups that hid the URL bar and opened 3 dozen different pop ups while you didn’t close the mother popup. Then they started clickjacking: that close ad button? Just opens another ad. Ad infinitum.

    Now, effectively editing the video to add an ad somewhere instead of serving it as a side file. The advertising industry as a whole feels like the absolute worst villains at a personal level, because they want to target you individually.

    • @ssj2marx@lemmy.ml
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      1217 days ago

      Google ads were originally a panacea for really bad popups of the early 2000s. Google had a strict list of dos and don’ts, and ad revenues were high enough that most websites only ran one or two.

  • @NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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    2418 days ago

    It was inevitable (and is arguably the “logical” extension of sponsor segments).

    As for what it will do to timestamps: The same thing it does to timestamps in podcasts. Some podcast players have a special way to tag the timestamp to adjust with the inserted ads but NOBODY hosts with those. So they are rendered useless.

    On the youtube side? They could potentially be auto-adjusted because youtube will know how many ads were inserted . But considering the goal of this is to serve ads…

  • @casmael@lemm.ee
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    2218 days ago

    Wow that’s very annoying. What does this mean for the future of adblocking?

    • MinusPi (she/they)
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      4118 days ago

      It’ll be difficult for a while until someone figures it out and then it’ll be easy again. It’s just an arms race.

      • @Lianodel@ttrpg.network
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        2418 days ago

        The last time Google pulled out all the stops to fight ad blockers, I had to update uBlock Origin every now and then until the whole thing passed. That’s all.

        So I’m not worried. But I am amused that they keep making ads more obnoxious, which pushes more people to use ad blockers. I didn’t even use sponsorblock until a particularly egregious bit of native advertising. They could probably gain ground by just making ads less irritating, but they absolutely will not.

        • @gjghkk@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          917 days ago

          Capitalism is in the end, fighting for monopoly. They rather lose money in foreseeable future, and probably ever, than allow adblockers do their thing for small user-base. Because they want max. control. I can only assume companies that do not go to arms race with their consumers are thee ones that aren’t public traded companies.

          • @Lianodel@ttrpg.network
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            17 days ago

            It might even be simpler than that. Capitalism just doesn’t care past the next quarter. And when ownership is disconnected from labor or even from customer, than it’s just a really rudimentary collective intelligence. The shareholders just want the line to go up, and everyone in the corporate structure is accountable to the shareholders, so they all do their part, big or little, to make that happen. It completely dispenses with personal responsibility, whether for negative externalities, direct harm, or even the future as close as months from now.

      • @elxeno@lemm.ee
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        1518 days ago

        This one might be harder, if YT just sends the ad like it was part of the video file, generating it on the fly, it’s a lot harder to detect, and probably not too hard for them to do, but breaking timestamps is pretty bad for some types of videos, like tutorials.

      • @bountygiver@lemmy.ml
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        1518 days ago

        it would require government intervention. Where a regulation must declare that ads must clearly be labelled as ads, so that adjustments can be made by detecting when is the ad segment happening.

        • @ssj2marx@lemmy.ml
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          17 days ago

          Sometime before the end of this decade I think we’re going to see the opposite - regulation that makes blocking ads illegal in the same way the DMCA makes cracking copyright protection illegal. They’ll package it with some kind of anti-CP thing and then call all the people who oppose the bill pedos.

        • @x4740N@lemm.ee
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          117 days ago

          If I recall correctly ads in the United states need to be labelled ads and is the reason #ad exists on Instagram

    • @Hana@beehaw.org
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      1418 days ago

      Sponsorblock “just” needs to transition from timestamps to timestamps + image hash. Not easy, but not impossible.

    • @ssj2marx@lemmy.ml
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      2217 days ago

      People will say, “but then how could a website like YouTube exit at all?”

      To which I say that we should retvrn to sharing funny videos via long email chains.

      • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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        1017 days ago

        See Flash websites ripping each other off for five years on either side of Youtube’s introduction.

        See Bittorrent moving more video than Netflix until like 2012.

        See twenty years of web-based P2P experiments. Weirdos with fat hard drives (hi) will always be happy to seed.

        Or - crazy thought - services could cost money. It would not take much. Youtube’s not getting ten bucks each time you watch a video. Bandwidth and storage keep getting cheaper. Nor are they paying for content, unlike Netflix and so on, and those fuckers are also considering ads.

        • @ssj2marx@lemmy.ml
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          717 days ago

          I’ve got no problem paying money for a service that’s worth it. I still buy games on Steam even though I know how to pirate them because Valve’s service is so goddamn convenient it beats piracy in many ways.

          Netflix used to be that good, and when YouTube Red rolled out I bought a year of it. But things have deteriorated significantly since then and the price has only gone up.

  • d-RLY?
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    2018 days ago

    At least it should still work with the hard coded sponsor spots that are actually part of the videos (like the “brought to you by Manscaped” or whatever).

    • @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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      2518 days ago

      Only if the ads are a fixed length and always in the same place for each playback of the same video.

      Inserting ads of various lengths in varying places throughout the video will alter all the time stamps for every playback.

      The 5th minute of the video might happen 5min after starting playback, or it could be 5min+a 2min ad break after starting. This could change from playback to playback; so basing ad/sponsor blocking on timestamps becomes entirely useless.

  • @matto@lemm.ee
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    1818 days ago

    Also, if the ads where in different parts of the video every time, it would not be possible to use SponsorBlock for them :(

    • @aCosmicWave@lemm.ee
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      1618 days ago

      Different users would see unique ads. So your ad could be 12 seconds long while my ad is 30 seconds long. A timestamp based skip would no longer work universally.

  • @jesterkun@midwest.social
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    1417 days ago

    Genuinely I’d be fine if someone made a thing that when an ad started a black overlay would go up and the spund would be muted.