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Aujourd’hui — 3 juin 2024Flux principal

Jordan9320 : les internautes déterrent les pratiques d’ado de Jordan Bardella

Par : Aurore Gayte
3 juin 2024 à 10:43

Il n'a suffi que d'un pseudonyme, révélé par le Monde, pour qu'une horde d'internautes se lance dans une chasse en ligne. L'objectif : retracer une grande partie des cheminements du jeune Jordan Bardella, une décennie avant sa candidature aux élections européennes de 2024.

À partir d’avant-hierFlux principal

YouTube Begins Skipping Videos for Ad-Blocker Users

Par : msmash
28 mai 2024 à 08:23
YouTube's latest move against ad blockers involves skipping videos straight to the end or muting audio for users with ad blockers enabled, according to user reports. This follows previous tests by the Google-owned platform, including blocking playback after three videos and slowing down load times for ad-blocker users.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

YouTube Rolling Out Its Widely Hated New Web Redesign

Par : BeauHD
23 mai 2024 à 23:20
Ben Schoon reports via 9to5Google: After first appearing earlier this year, YouTube once again appears to be rolling out a new redesign for its website that everyone hates. In mid-April, Google started testing a redesign to YouTube's website, which moved the title of the video, its description, and the comments to the side of the screen. In their place, video recommendations were moved directly underneath the video being watched with much larger thumbnails and titles. The change was widely hated by almost everyone who got it, but it didn't show up for all users. In the weeks to follow, YouTube reverted the redesign. Now, the YouTube redesign is back. As spotted by many users, YouTube has started rolling out this redesign yet again. The new look has been appearing over the past few days, though it doesn't seem like it's a wide rollout. Rather, it appears to still be a test more than anything else. What does this second attempt mean? It's still unclear if YouTube intends to make this new look the default experience, but a second round of testing certainly implies more data is being gathered.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

YouTube's Ad Blocker Crackdown Now Includes Third-Party Apps

Par : BeauHD
16 avril 2024 à 10:00
YouTube has updated its policies to no longer allow "third-party apps to turn off ads." The Verge reports: This appears to target mobile ad blockers like AdGuard, which lets you open YouTube within the ad blocking app, where you'll get to view videos interruption-free. "We only allow third-party apps to use our API when they follow our API Services Terms of Service," YouTube says. "When we find an app that violates these terms, we will take appropriate action to protect our platform, creators, and viewers." To get around this, YouTube once again suggests signing up for the ad-free YouTube Premium.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Des vidéos morbides surfent sur l’ascension de l’Everest d’Inoxtag

Par : Aurore Gayte
10 avril 2024 à 14:21

Le youtubeur français Inoxtag est parti faire l'ascension de l'Everest, et est donc fortement limité sur un plan technique pour publier des vidéos de lui sur les réseaux sociaux. Des tiers en profitent pour annoncer faussement sa mort, et amasser des vues.

YouTube avertit OpenAI de ne pas piquer ses vidéos pour entraîner Sora

5 avril 2024 à 11:34

Sora

Le patron de YouTube, Neal Mohan, ne sait pas si OpenAI se sert des vidéos hébergées sur la plateforme pour entraîner Sora, son IA qui génère des clips. Mais si c'est le cas, ce serait une infraction à ses règles.

YouTube Says OpenAI Training Sora With Its Videos Would Break Rules

Par : msmash
4 avril 2024 à 19:40
The use of YouTube videos to train OpenAI's text-to-video generator would be an infraction of the platform's terms of service, YouTube Chief Executive Officer Neal Mohan said. Bloomberg: In his first public remarks on the topic, Mohan said he had no firsthand knowledge of whether OpenAI had, in fact, used YouTube videos to refine its artificial intelligence-powered video creation tool, called Sora. But if that were the case, it would be a "clear violation" of YouTube's terms of use, he said. "From a creator's perspective, when a creator uploads their hard work to our platform, they have certain expectations," Mohan said Thursday. "One of those expectations is that the terms of service is going to be abided by. It does not allow for things like transcripts or video bits to be downloaded, and that is a clear violation of our terms of service. Those are the rules of the road in terms of content on our platform."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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