They can win by making videos only accessible via account and aggressively banning adblock users. It will hurt it at first but people would rather accept it instead of finding a replacement. I expect this to happen in a few years.
Ads can be randomly placed so there is no specific timestamp to skip.
This would obviously be very costly for Google, which is likely why they haven’t done it yet, but ultimately an ad blocker wouldn’t be able to block those.
Yeah. Which is pretty much undefeatable unless they get rid of the ability to skip sections of a video entirely and I don’t think there’ll be wanting to do that. Sponsor block doesn’t exactly block things, it just skips sections of a video that the community has submitted it’s not quite the same thing.
Those sections might be intro animations, that bit where they go “hey guys my name is XYZ YouTuber smash that like button and don’t forget to subscribe comment and ring that bell!” etc
This is an arms race YouTube cannot win
They can win by making videos only accessible via account and aggressively banning adblock users. It will hurt it at first but people would rather accept it instead of finding a replacement. I expect this to happen in a few years.
Nothing can beat a VCR with an ad skipper.
And I am not afraid to use it.
They can just embed the ads in the actual video, server side.
Sponsorblock would still work, wouldn’t?
Ads can be randomly placed so there is no specific timestamp to skip.
This would obviously be very costly for Google, which is likely why they haven’t done it yet, but ultimately an ad blocker wouldn’t be able to block those.
Don’t give them any ideas, a’right? But yeah. That’s true. We could skip those identifying per frame/time, but adblocking would need more resources.
Yeah. Which is pretty much undefeatable unless they get rid of the ability to skip sections of a video entirely and I don’t think there’ll be wanting to do that. Sponsor block doesn’t exactly block things, it just skips sections of a video that the community has submitted it’s not quite the same thing.
Those sections might be intro animations, that bit where they go “hey guys my name is XYZ YouTuber smash that like button and don’t forget to subscribe comment and ring that bell!” etc
You are underestimating companies. Twitch won this race. YouTube can win too.
How did twitch win? Would you not say that YouTube has a larger user base, and therefore a larger target of this sort of cracking?
Twitch has the unique use case of live streaming, which makes the content’s timeliness a factor in the users experience.