It's also a showcase for users to promote themselves. Out-of-work actors and wannabes are known to have used YouTube to plug their talents. Some have picked up work. Other YouTube users have become cult names and been signed professionally. TUNG, a tongue-cleaning product manufacturer, are sponsoring one rising YouTube star because of his "huge obsession with licking things".
Lessons to be learnt
There's a lot to learn from YouTube. The first lesson is that internet users are desperate for compelling, quirky and entertaining multimedia content. And they are happy to get it in small bites. They may not want to pay for it, but they'll probably put up with a short TVC or banner ad for the privilege of watching.
The second is universality. Anyone, anywhere, on any system - even mobile devices - can watch YouTube's videos. There are no proprietary formats, no plug-ins to download, you don't need a particular browser or the latest version of Windows. This is going to be a harsh lesson for video sites that try to force users to specific (usually Windows-only) formats. Accessibility is the only way.
The third - as NBC has learnt, but the RIAA still shuts its eyes to - is not to fear and resist the New Media Revolution, but to embrace it. The internet is here to stay and here to grow. It's impossible to try and control the machinations of millions of hungry bright minds. If people want to see a video, they'll find a way to rip it, copy it, encode it. Forget proprietary formats, forget copyright protection - the hackers and crackers will always be ten steps ahead.
This week's favourites in the AME Info office:
Cute kitten falls asleep
Parkour (urban gymnastics)
4 Year Old Djembe Drummer
Comic soccer
Where the Hell is Matt?

Lisa Creffield, Correspondent



