(no title)
anonymous5133 | 6 years ago
1) young children are more likely to incorrectly click an ad or to not skip the ad (because they can't really read or understand that the ads are skippable)
2) young children often do not have ad blocking software installed
3) young children are more likely to watch playlists
The overall effect is that young children demographic is the most profitable demographic on youtube. Also lots of parents are basically using youtube as a form of free babysitting. Next time you go to the grocery store, just look at how many kids are sitting in the cart tapping away on a phone or a tablet.
Slartie|6 years ago
r00fus|6 years ago
They are supremely addicted to that stuff (even the non-objectionable ones), it was scary to witness.
settyness|6 years ago
Then there was the instance, a sort of another soft "Adpocalypse" where all these videos featuring children had creepy comments. This caused a culling of comments on certain videos, but it was ultimately a situation YouTube had fostered.
FussyZeus|6 years ago
It's just a never ending deluge of spam and bullshit in my brain and it's been there for so long and has increased to such a ludicrous degree as I actually now LAUGH when I see an ad shoved into a new place.
Like, I do not understand why anybody is spending money on advertising. You could be advertising the most amazing product in the history of the world and you would be simply drowned in spam, and no one would ever see it or care.
And to bring this rant back to topic, of course kids are the only ones left. They haven't had their minds assaulted with predatory conniving language for decades yet. They're the only ones who still look at ads as anything other than spam email but in whatever format it's in. But don't worry; at the breakneck pace advertisers are set into now, they'll be getting used to it even sooner, and it will be even LESS effective, until the only people still watching ads are infants crapping their pants. Maybe we can monetize little holograms in diapers and then sell the diapers for 5 cents cheaper. Let's just get to the bottom of this barrel!
adrianN|6 years ago
ionforce|6 years ago
This fact means nothing for as long as one can accumulate ad dollars based on views generated by children.
product50|6 years ago
Secondly, even brand advertisers have specific demographics in mind. So while a kid video will appeal to a kid specific brand (think cereals or toys), many brands won't spend in that category.
Given this, your thesis here is not entirely accurate.
unknown|6 years ago
[deleted]
TheRealWatson|6 years ago
To me the worst are the stupid "Live" videos, which aren't really live and just parks the children for hours on a stupid loop with a worrisome Chat window that pops open.
For a while I only let her watch YT Kids, which I configured to only allow the shows that I personally approve. The Amazon Fire tablet for kids is OK too.
nine_k|6 years ago
The problem is that you likely don't want to log in the kid's device to your own Google account (with premium activated). If you want to create another account just for that, you need to lie about the age, and need to link a credit card to pay for the account — and for anything else on YouTube, then.
It would be great to have kid-specific accounts with parental control and access limitations; MS provides something similar.
TeMPOraL|6 years ago
(I'm 100% serious, and at this point I wonder if there's business in selling a NAS preconfigured for streaming as a set-top box, with parents responsible for dropping URLs that youtube-dl will then download.)
pmh|6 years ago
Ajedi32|6 years ago
edgarvaldes|6 years ago
Is it common for young kids to own the devices where they look the videos at?
jandrese|6 years ago
OrgNet|6 years ago
evil parents
BeetleB|6 years ago