Free video software, free computer software, free graphics programs, free video editing, free web browsers, free web video players, free image editing programs, free v


ideo, video clips, free video editing programs

 


 


 
 

 

Internet Video Magazine SPECIAL DEALS

Get this week's special  Deal on Camcorders, Cameras, Audio Gear and Other Electronics

 

 

 

 


 

 


 

Is YouTube the home for Bad Internet Video?

by Mark Shapiro

YouTube Rings Up over 100 Million US viewers but are they really watching all those bad videos?

 

June 4, 2009

According to a recent comScore report (see below), in January 2009, Google (essentially YouTube) served up over 6.4 billion videos - but what are they watching?  Are the best one hundred videos getting all the views while the millions of others languish in video purgatory?

If you are a frequent YouTube visitors you know that most of the videos posted on the site are awful and close to unwatchable. How many times can you watch teenagers picking their noses, crashing skateboards and dancing to hip hop songs?

According to YouTube, "People are watching hundreds of millions of videos a day on YouTube and uploading hundreds of thousands of videos daily. In fact, every minute, ten hours of video is uploaded to YouTube."

That is an awful lot of bad video! I guess it needs a home somewhere.

I'd like to see a tracking report that shows what percentage of YouTube videos actually get watched - aside from the one person who originally posted it. I would guess that less than 1% of all YouTube videos get accessed more then five times a year. Maybe the Google PR team will send me the stats.

Last year, there were discussions that said that Google may have to provide records of each and every video watched - regarding who watched it and when, to Viacom. This was for Viacom's copyright suit. So the stats are out there.

Now I must confess I am a bit of hypocrite - I have posted my share of bad videos to YouTube (as well as others that were pretty darn good). One way to improve your YouTube video quality efficiency is by create your own subscription channel that accesses videos by those producers you think do good work. One of my favorites is Lisa Nova

Checkout her video "Subscriptions are Amazing" on how to create your own YouTube Video Channel Subscription

 

 

There are good Internet videos on YouTube - its just not easy to find them among the hundreds of millions of hours of BAD videos

By the way, if you did make a great video, and if it is up on YouTube, tell us about it. If it is REALLY GOOD, we will feature it at our Best Videos of the Week section.

 


YouTube Surpasses 100 Million U.S. Viewers for the First Time

 

Americans’ Time Spent Viewing Jumps 15 Percent versus Previous Month

 

RESTON, VA, March 4, 2009 – comScore (NASDAQ: SCOR), a leader in measuring the digital world, today released January 2009 data from the comScore Video Metrix service showing that U.S. Internet users viewed 14.8 billion online videos during the month, representing an increase of 4 percent versus December 2008. YouTube led the growth charge, accounting for 91 percent of the incremental gain in the number of videos viewed versus December, as it surpassed 100 million viewers for the first time.

 

Google Sites Adds to Lead in Video Market Share

In January, Google Sites once again ranked as the top U.S. video property with 6.4 billion videos viewed (43 percent online video market share), with YouTube.com accounting for more than 99 percent of all videos viewed at the property. Fox Interactive Media ranked second with 552 million videos (3.7 percent), followed by Yahoo! Sites with 374 million (2.5 percent) and Viacom Digital with 288 million (1.9 percent).  Megavideo climbed 15 percent (103 million videos) in January to capture a spot in the top ten for the first time. 

______________________________________________________________________________

Top U.S. Online Video Properties* by Videos Viewed

January  2009

Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations

Source: comScore Video Metrix

 

Property                Videos (000)     Share (%) of Videos

Total Internet           14,831,607            100.0

Google Sites              6,367,638             42.9

Fox Interactive Media       551,991              3.7

Yahoo! Sites                374,161              2.5

Viacom Digital              287,615              1.9

Microsoft Sites             267,475              1.8

HULU.COM                    250,473              1.7

Turner Network              195,983              1.3

AOL LLC                     184,808              1.2

Disney Online               141,452              1.0

MEGAVIDEO.COM               102,857              0.7

*Rankings based on video content sites; excludes video server networks.  Online video includes both streaming and progressive download video.

_______________________________________________________________________________

 

Google Sites Surpasses 100 Million Viewers in January

More than 147 million U.S. Internet users watched an average of 101 videos per viewer in January. Google Sites grew to 102 million online video viewers during the month, or more than two out of every three Internet users who watched video. Fox Interactive ranked second with 62.1 million viewers, followed by Yahoo! Sites (41.9 million) and Microsoft Sites (30.0 million).

_______________________________________________________________________________

Top U.S. Online Video Properties* by Unique Viewers

January 2009

Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations

Source: comScore Video Metrix

 

Property            Unique Viewers (000)    Average Videos per Viewer

Total Internet          147,322                   100.7

Google Sites            101,870                    62.5

Fox Interactive Media    62,109                     8.9

Yahoo! Sites             41,859                     8.9

Microsoft Sites          30,042                     8.9

AOL LLC                  27,198                     6.8

HULU.COM                 24,448                    10.2

CBS Corporation          24,215                     4.2

Viacom Digital           24,126                    11.9

Turner Network           22,979                     8.5

Disney Online            13,435                    10.5

*Rankings based on video content sites; excludes video server networks.  Online video includes both streaming and progressive download video.

_______________________________________________________________________________

Other notable findings from January 2009 include:

  • 76.8 percent of the total U.S. Internet audience viewed online video.

  • The average online video viewer watched 356 minutes of video (approximately 6 hours), up 15 percent versus December.

  • 100.9 million viewers watched 6.3 billion videos on YouTube.com (62.6 videos per viewer).

  • 54.1 million viewers watched 473 million videos on MySpace.com (8.7 videos per viewer).

  • The duration of the average online video was 3.5 minutes, up from 3.2 minutes per video in December.

  • The duration of the average online video viewed at Megavideo was 24.9 minutes, higher than any other video property in the top ten.

 

About comScore
comScore, Inc. (NASDAQ: SCOR) is a global leader in measuring the digital world and preferred source of digital marketing intelligence. For more information, please visit www.comscore.com/companyinfo.

 

If you would like to discontinue receiving news updates from comScore or to modify your subscription options, please visit: http://www.comscore.com/press/unsubscribe

Read top comScore thought leaders’ views on current industry news at the comScore Voices blog:
http://www.comscore.com/blog/

comScore maintains a library of data-rich white papers, presentations and recorded webinars highlighting today’s most interesting digital trends. These free presentations can be downloaded at www.comscore.com/slides

 

 

 

 

 

copyright 2009 SRS Productions