YouTube focuses on creators , Made on YouTubeis here again and there’s a lot to talk about. From further ai integration to Communities, YouTube seems to be gearing up to compete against rivals like TikTok and Netflix. Here are five things we were really interested in among the onslaught of updates and new features.
YouTube presents the The system allows viewers to “go beyond” liking and sharing a video. The idea is to allow fans to give smaller ones more visibility, so promoting is only allowed on videos from creators with fewer than 500,000 subscribers and only on videos less than a week old. The most heavily promoted content will end up on a new leaderboard of the top 100 most-advertised videos in their country. Fans can only promote three times in a week for now, though additional uses will eventually be available for purchase in the future.
YouTube Shorts creators will be able to use Google DeepMind technology/ai/google-generative-ai-veo-imagen-3/” rel=”nofollow noopener” target=”_blank” data-ylk=”slk:Veo video generator model;cpos:4;pos:1;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas” class=”link “> Later this year, Veo can generate six-second clips after reading a message, and all creations will have a label showing that generative ai was used, along with the SynthID watermark. The Veo integration will exist in parallel to (but not replace) YouTube's Dream Screen, another ai video generation tool, which was introduced .
He is currently undergoing a revamp and is set to launch in early 2025. Currently, only the channel owner can post to the Community tab, but the new experience will allow subscribers to create posts, with a tab to view only the creator’s posts if needed. Subscribers can of course post images to spark conversation. Some creators currently interact with their viewers through other platforms (such as Discord) and this appears to be an attempt to create an internal alternative.
Some of us regret not being able to understand creators who speak languages we don’t speak, but YouTube aims to solve this problem by implementing automatic dubbing. With the help of ai, viewers can now listen to automatically translated audio in their preferred language. YouTube promises that the audio will sound natural, taking into account the creator’s intonation and environment.
Finally, the platform will have an update that will reflect Netflix's current design. Creators will be able to organize their content into seasons and episodes, and there will be previews before users play any content. The Hollywood ReporterWe can expect to see these starting next year, although no specific date has been announced.