Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

YouTube will explore NFT features for creators

YouTube is exploring features for its video creators to capitalize on non-fungible tokens, its chief executive officer said on Tuesday, becoming the latest tech company to tap into a digital collectibles craze that has exploded in the past year.

"We're always focused on expanding the YouTube ecosystem to help creators capitalize on emerging technologies, including things like NFTs, while continuing to strengthen and enhance the experiences creators and fans have on YouTube," wrote YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki in a letter on the company's 2022 priorities. 

NFTs are a type of digital asset which exists on the record-keeping technology blockchain. They have seen a surge in popularity over the last year, with people buying artwork and video highlights from sports games as NFTs.

Sales of NFTs reached some $25 billion in 2021, according to data from market tracker DappRadar, although there were signs of growth slowing toward the end of the year.

A spokesperson for Alphabet Inc's YouTube declined to share more details about the potential NFT features, which were first reported by Bloomberg News.

Last week, Twitter Inc announced the launch of a tool through which users can showcase NFTs as hexagonal profile pictures. The Financial Times reported this month that Meta Platforms Inc were working on ways to let users create and sell NFTs on Facebook and Instagram. In December, Instagram head Adam Mosseri said the company was exploring NFTs.

The popular short video app TikTok in September ventured into the craze, announcing an NFT collection designed by some of its top creators.

Reddit Inc has also been exploring the space: recent job listings from the company on LinkedIn advertised for several engineer roles for a "rapidly growing team that aims to build the largest creator economy on the internet, powered by independent creators, digital goods, and NFTs."

-reuters

Friday, October 8, 2021

Google to stop pairing ads with climate change misinformation

SAN FRANCISCO, United States - Google on Thursday said it will no longer post ads next to misinformation about climate change on its search engine or on global video-sharing platform YouTube.

The new policy for Google advertisers, publishers and YouTube creators will prohibit the platforms from helping people make money from content that "contradicts well-established scientific consensus around the existence and causes of climate change."

That includes online content referring to climate change as a hoax or a scam, or denying the world's temperature is rising and that human activity is contributing to the problem, Google said in a post.

"Advertisers simply don’t want their ads to appear next to this content," Google said.

"And publishers and creators don’t want ads promoting these claims to appear on their pages or videos."

The internet giant added that the policy change aligns with efforts by the company to promote sustainable practices and confront climate change.

"Google's important decision to demonetize climate misinformation could turn the tide on the climate denial economy," said NGO Avaaz campaign director Fadi Quran.

"For years, climate misinformers have confused public opinion and obstructed urgent political action on climate change, and YouTube has been one of their weapons of choice."

Quran urged other online platforms to follow Google's lead and stop funneling money to those peddling debunked denials of climate change.

Social networking colossus Facebook, which is Google's biggest competitor in the digital advertising market, touts efforts to curb climate misinformation at its platform but has no such ad ban in place.

Social media platforms are regularly accused of promoting content that provokes strong emotional responses in order to keep users engaged so the platforms can make more money made from ads, even if the content can cause harm.

Agence France-Presse

Monday, December 14, 2020

Massive outage hits Google services worldwide

Paris, France — A massive outage knocked Google services, including Gmail and video sharing platform YouTube, offline across much of the globe Monday.

Within minutes, social media sites were awash with hashtags including #googledown and #YouTubeDOWN as hundreds of millions of internet users tried vainly to connect to the US search engine.

Google indicated the outage had affected all of its services for the “majority” of users.

Agence France-Presse

Friday, June 5, 2020

Influencer Jake Paul faces charges after Arizona mall riot


SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Social media influencer Jake Paul faces misdemeanor charges following a riot at a mall outside Phoenix, police said Thursday. Paul, who has 20 million followers, says he was merely trying to find people protesting against the death of George Floyd.

Paul, 23, was identified as a participant in a riot last Saturday night at Scottsdale Fashion Square and has been charged with criminal trespass and unlawful assembly, the Scottsdale Police Department said in a statement.

Police determined that “Paul was present after the protest was declared an unlawful assembly and the rioters were urged to leave the area by police.” He entered and remained inside of the mall when it was closed, police said.

Sgt. Benjamin Hoster said he didn’t know whether Paul has an attorney and that he was issued a summons to appear in court “in a month.”

Paul, who has over 20 million YouTube subscribers, said in video posted Wednesday, that he and friends went to the mall to attend a protest against the death of George Floyd while in custody of Minneapolis.

They instead found people engaged in looting and property damage that included shattered windows of offices and stores, Paul said, adding that he didn’t participate in that activity.

“That’s the way it looked on camera. However that isn’t the case,” he said.

Paul said he kept walking in the mall area despite encountering the criminal activity because he still wanted to find the protest.

He said it was upsetting that social media posts accused him of vandalism. “I’m above that. I don’t’need to vanadalize. I don’t need to loot and I know it’s not the way forward.”

Paul said he was an “easy target” and that he has learned a lesson about entering situations that could pose problems. “But it’s not going to stop me from doing what I need to do.””

The Associated Press

Monday, June 1, 2020

BTS’ ‘DNA’ music video tops 1 billion YouTube views


SEOUL — The music video of BTS’ 2017 hit song “DNA” topped 1 billion YouTube views on Monday, becoming the band’s first music video to surpass that milestone.

“DNA,” the lead track of BTS’ 2017 album “Love Yourself: Her,” achieved the feat early Monday morning, according to the band’s label-management agency Big Hit Entertainment.


Released in September 2017, the song stayed on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart for four consecutive weeks, and in February the following year, it was certified “Gold” by the Recording Industry Association of America.

“DNA” is so far the most viewed video in BTS’ globally acclaimed catalogue, followed by “Boy With Luv” featuring Halsey, with over 700 million views, and “Fire,” “MIC Drop” and “Idol,” each with over 600 million views.

The septet has announced that it is currently producing a new album to be released in the coming months. BTS also plans to hold a paid online concert, Bang Bang Con the Live, on June 14.

BTS is also the first male K-pop group with a music video with over 1 billion views. Singer Psy was the first Korean artist to achieve the milestone with his 2012 global hit “Gangnam Style,” with K-pop girl band BLACKPINK also racking up more than 1 billion views with “Ddu-du Ddu-du” in November of last year.

Yonhap News Agency


Monday, May 25, 2020

BTS’ ‘Fake Love’ tops 700m YouTube views


SEOUL — The music video of K-pop boy band BTS’ “Fake Love” has drawn more than 700 million clicks on YouTube, the band’s management agency said Sunday.

The lead track of BTS’ 2018 release “Love Yourself: Tear” surpassed the 700 million mark at around 6 p.m., according to Big Hit Entertainment.

This is the group’s third music video to hit this number of views on the global video-streaming site, after “DNA” and “Boy With Luv.”

Yonhap News Agency

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

YouTube to curb amount of 5G-linked coronavirus conspiracy theory videos recommended to users


As COVID-19 continues to spread throughout the world, so do conspiracy theories about its origin. A popular theory that has surfaced and flourished across the web is one which suggests there is a link between the virus and the launch of 5G connectivity. Yesterday, The Guardian reported that videos supporting this claim published to YouTube will be suppressed.

Fewer videos with such content will be recommended to users and surface in their search results, as these theories have led to a series of attacks on phone masts, particularly in the United Kingdom. Videos that go so far as to breach the company’s policies will be removed; however, “content that is simply conspiratorial about 5G mobile communications networks, without mentioning coronavirus, is still allowed on the site.”

YouTube has been working since early February to remove potentially harmful content that suggests a relationship between COVID-19 and 5G as well as various other inaccurate conceptions about the virus. Complementing these actions, the company has also been making information from recognized health organizations like the CDC and WHO about the disease easier to find and access directly on the platform.

AFP Relaxnews 

Sunday, August 11, 2019

BTS’ ‘Boy With Luv’ hits 500 million YouTube views


SEOUL — The music video of K-pop super band BTS’ “Boy With Luv” surpassed 500 million YouTube views Sunday, its management agency said.

The video of the band’s main song on the “Map of the Soul: Persona” album released in April, eclipsed the mark earlier in the day, some four months after it went on sale, according to Big Hit Entertainment.

That makes BTS the first South Korean singers with over 5 million YouTube hits for each of its seven music videos, including those of “DNA,” “Fake Love,” “MIC Drop Remix” and “Idol.”

The “DNA” music video surpassed 800 million views on the global streaming site Saturday.

The song “Boy With Luv” has also blazed a trail by winning three Guinness World Records related to the most-watched YouTube video in the 24 hours after the initial release. (Yonhap)

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

YouTube to stop playing unskippable 30-second ads


You can soon kiss those pesky, unavoidable advertisments on YouTube goodbye.

The video-streaming service will be doing away with 30-second advertisements starting next year, reported the BBC.

“We’ve decided to stop supporting 30-second unskippable ads as of 2018 and focus instead on formats that work well for both users and advertisers,” said a Google spokesman.

However, there has not been any news about the site removing the shorter, but also unskippable 15- and 20-second advertisements, as well as the six-second bumper advertisements introduced last April.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Social media erupt with ‘Pen Pineapple Apple Pen’ memes, parodies


“Pen Pineapple Apple Pen,” or “PPAP,” a Japanese song brandished by many as an infectiously viral “ringtone,” has not only “brainwashed” Japanese social media but also other Asian online users.

The frenzy track was performed by Piko-Taro, a fictional character brainstormed by comedian-DJ Kosaka Daimaou, whose real name is Kazuhiko Kosaka. Although the comic clip went live on the video-sharing site for a month, it was only felicitously celebrated by social media when it was posted by several Facebook pages in the past few days.

Clad in yellow garments and an animal print scarf, Piko-Taro was likened to Borsalino Kizaru, the swanky marine admiral in the smash-hit anime series “One Piece.”

The music video, uploaded on Piko-Taro’s YouTube account, has amassed 6.6 million views while a similar clip posted on 9GAG’s Facebook page has garnered 54.6 million views as of Wednesday.

Several Asian social media pages enhanced their creative skills by making memes of the Japanese sensational hit.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

YouTube establishes own social network through the Community


It was previously known that YouTube planned to add a social network feature to its core service. The company has finally made it official with its announcement of the YouTube Community.

The new feature is said to allow creators to better engage their audience through text, GIFs and images, among others. The goal is to keep creators from moving to competing platforms by providing them more tools to connect with the audience apart from video content, reports TechCrunch.

Apparently YouTube had been testing the new service for the past months with several creators to get their feedback. The service is now being launched in public beta with the group of early testers.

The new feature can be accessed by way of the Community on a creator’s channel. From here the creators can share images, test posts and other contents that would allow them to build their community of followers within YouTube itself.

Essentially, the Community page is a kind of mini-social network inside the channel’s page. But for the time being, the Community feature will remain in testing and YouTube will be listening to feedback regarding features and functionality. Alfred Bayle

source: technology.inquirer.net

Sunday, July 3, 2016

‘YouTubers’ outshining old-school television


SAN FRANCISCO, United States — A media revolution is taking place, and most people over 35 years of age aren’t tuned in.

Millennials and their successors are shunning old-school television in favor of watching what they want whenever they wish on Google-owned YouTube or other video platforms like Dailymotion or Facebook.

“Young people don’t really watch TV any more; they watch online videos that are shorter and more talent-driven,” says Fabienne Fourquet, a former executive at A&E Television and France’s Canal+ who now heads the multichannel network 2btube.

“They don’t want to be Hollywood stars when they grow up, they want to be YouTubers. There is this whole other world.”

The new multichannel networks, or MCNs, are talent agents of sorts for creators of videos shared at online venues.

They help creators, often referred to as YouTubers, with video production and promotion along with finding partners or sponsors in return for a percentage of revenue.

Fourquet said popular subjects include music, comedy, sports, video games, fashion and beauty.

She noted that three-quarters of her viewers were younger than 34 years of age, and half were under 25.

“There are very few of us old people,” Fourquet quipped.

– World tunes in -Self-described YouTuber Caroline Artiss has been a chef for 20 years, but opted out of restaurants and went to work for herself in catering in 2008.

Then, a friend showed her how simple it was to make videos for YouTube.

“It was just me and a tripod in my kitchen,” Artiss told AFP.

“Then people starting tuning in from all over the world.”

She recounted cooking her way across the United States for a multi-episode show after catching eyes at BBC America and a television network in Malaysia.

Artiss said she approaches her cooking videos from the perspective of a single mom — short on money and time but needing to feed a family.

She was signed on by a video network that describes itself as being tailored for a mobile generation and focused on “tastemakers” sharing passion for food and travel.

“It still blows my mind,” Artiss said.

“I am coming from a single mom, living in London, struggling to pay my bills to having an opportunity to start my own TV channel in a way.”

Artiss teamed with other chefs to open Gorgeous Kitchen restaurant at London Heathrow airport.

She has a cookbook due out later this year and works with Youth Policy Institute to raise money to get fresh produce to low-income families.

Naturally, she did a video. It can be seen online at app.mobilecause.com/vf/YPIFRESH.

– Television tomfoolery -An annual Vidcon gathering in Southern California has become a hot venue for YouTubers to connect with business opportunities and ecstatic fans.

Some 25,000 people were reported to have attended this year’s Vidcon, which took place in June.

“With the onset of digital video platforms and the fact that everyone has a smartphone in their pockets, we have democratized being a creator,” said Paladin co-founder James Creech, whose California company specializes in technology for finding budding stars in a vast universe where anyone can post content online.

“A 17-year-old in his or her own bedroom can compete with the likes of CBS and build an audience that would rival a major media company.”

Keys to hit online videos include being creative and regularly posting content, according to Creech.

Amateurs can outshine polished professional content with authentic connections that make viewers think of them as friends, he said.

“Regular TV is about cartoons and YouTube is about real people and the games I like,” 11-year-old California boy and online video fan Henry Crawford told AFP.

“Television is tomfoolery.”

Paladin indexes millions of channels, providing analytics that can narrow down videos by popularity, topic, language and more.

The YouTube channel with the most subscribers is that of Swedish video maker and comedian PewDiePie, who provides captivating commentary while playing video games.

Hot online video trends include “unboxing,” in which people film themselves or others opening packages with unknown contents.

A popular YouTube channel called Hydraulic Press features videos of things being crushed by just that piece of equipment.

Amazon-owned Twitch on Friday announced that it is experimenting with a new “Social Eating” category in which people streaming broadcasts on the service socialize with viewers over meals.

Traditional media companies would be wise to be worried by the trend, according to Creech.

“It’s a huge disruption,” Creech said. “We are in the midst of a revolution in media and it is very exciting.”

source: technology.inquirer.net

Monday, May 30, 2016

Man proposes to girlfriend using ‘Super Mario Maker’


To boost the relationship ‘to the next level’, a gamer in Arkansas, United States, devised a catchy way to ask his girlfriend’s hand by using Super Mario Maker, a forefront feature in the classic video game Super Mario Bros.

Pro gamer Shane Birkinbine purchased a 2015 version of the video game and designed a level to tickle his girlfriend, Pam Edwards. The latest version allows gamers to craft and rearrange levels for entertainment purposes, according to Daily Mail.

The memorable and romantic video was uploaded on video-sharing site YouTube with the caption, “Hope everyone enjoys just a bit of our special moment. Geeks do it better!”

In the trending video clip that stockpiled 756,000 views, Edwards was seen playing the game until she lurches at the Super Mario modified level.

Birkinbine asks his significant other,  “Babe, what does that say?” as Edwards glances at her name, which is spelled out in the hollow blocks. Then, the ultimate question popped out.

Astonished as ever, Edwards ecstatically replies his endearing question with a sweet ‘yes’. The video ended with the couple confessing their love to one another.

Many YouTube users were swayed with the proposal’s creativity and in return, Birkinbine thanked the people who gave optimistic remarks in a YouTube comment, “Just never thought it would come from our little corner of the world. This video is nothing without her reaction. She is the star. ” Gianna Francesca Catolico

source: technology.inquirer.net

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

YouTube ramps 360-degree video with ‘Spotlight Stories’


YouTube on Tuesday added interactive, 360-degree animation video to its line-up, with help from the makers of “Wallace and Gromit.”

Dubbed “Spotlight Stories,” the new feature will be viewable on the YouTube app of an array of Android-powered smartphones.

Showcasing the technology was a Santa-themed short film from Academy Award-winning studio Aardman Animations, entitled “Special Delivery.”

The animated short centers on a building custodian trying to find a “mysterious stranger” who remains just out of sight but leaves behind a trail of gifts.

Designed by Google as a new form of storytelling, the immersive films allow users to drill down into sub-stories within their plot by moving their phone towards what they want to see.

“The sensors on your phone allow the story to be interactive, so when you move your phone to various scenes, you unlock mini-stories within the story,” technical project lead Rachid El Guerrab said in a blog post.

“Special Delivery” features 10 subplots and three potential endings.

Google Spotlight Stories will be expanded next year to more Android devices as well as a YouTube application for mobile devices powered by Apple software, El Guerrab said.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Friday, September 4, 2015

Disney unveils Star Wars toys amid marketing blitz


NEW YORK — The release of the new Star Wars movie may still be months off, but Disney is unleashing its full marketing “Force” behind the launch of hundreds of toys and other items related to the film.

The massive marketing blitz, which Disney has named “Force Friday,” spans all kinds of media and included an 18-hour global “unboxing” streamed live on YouTube. Meanwhile, major toy retailers planned to be open and hold special events when the toys first became available just after midnight Friday.

The marketing push behind “Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens,” is unique because it’s so far ahead of the movie’s US release, 116 days to be exact. But analysts say it can work because Star Wars is such a popular franchise.

Leaked images of action figures of characters that have not even hit the big screen — like Sarco Plank, some kind of alien desert nomad that has only been glimpsed in a Vanity Fair on-set shoot — are only likely to fuel consumer demand, says Steve Pasierb, CEO of the Toy Industry Association.

“It’s pretty rare, but in the age of social media, you can get those characters out and create buzz around these things in ways that you couldn’t in the past,” Pasierb says. “There’s something easy to tap into, which is the Star Wars mystique which is some 30 years old.”

Industry analysts at PiperJaffrey say they expect some $3 billion worth of Star Wars merchandise will be sold this year and that sales next year could be even larger.

Even in a non-movie year, Star Wars merchandise has consistently sold well — $2 billion annually around the world, according to Pasierb. So it’s not so far-fetched that Disney will exceed that in the publicity-blitz filled weeks ahead of premiere of the first Star Wars movie since Episode III in 2005.

Walt Disney Co. is fanning the flames of its Lucasfilm unit by making special use of the network of YouTube talent that it acquired when it bought Maker Studios for upwards of $500 million last year. It arranged for 14 Maker stars around the globe to open new merchandise in live Web videos starting Wednesday afternoon. The event included a splashy special appearance Thursday morning on “Good Morning America,” the variety news program of Disney-owned ABC.

While it isn’t paying the stars — other than travel and expenses — it’s hardly a non-partisan group of reviewers. The finale in San Francisco was hosted by Chris Pirillo, a self-described super fan who named his daughter Jedi.

Toy makers both big and small are gearing up for a big rush on Friday, then another wave of sales as the holiday shopping season gets going and the movie’s Dec. 18 release date draws closer.

Hasbro Inc., which has been making Star Wars toys for more than 30 years, planned to unveil more than 100 different items Friday.

“There’s a new generation of boys and girls who are going to be brought in who may not even be aware of Star Wars yet,” says Joe Ninivaggi, Hasbro’s senior brand manager for Star Wars.

The Pawtucket, Rhode Island-based toy maker’s offerings include Furbacca, a Chewbacca version of its Furby toy. It’s also selling several different versions of lightsabers that feature the glowing daggers noticeable in the movie’s previews.

Sphero, a Boulder, Colorado-based robot maker and one of the first members of Disney’s Techstars program for startups, created a $150 mini version of the BB-8 droid featured in the new movie.

In the movie, the BB-8 is kind of like an updated version of R2-D2. It’s a giant rolling sphere, with a traditional droid head that somehow manages to stay on top. The mini version created by Sphero moves much the same way.

Developing and producing its BB-8 used up the majority of Sphero’s resources for this year. But the company, which has received funding from Disney, expects that investment to pay off for years to come.

Other toys coming out include Toronto-based Spin Master Corp.’s “Legendary Yoda,” a 16-inch version of the Jedi Master that boasts lifelike movements and voice recognition. It’s yours for $180.

Fuhu, which makes the nabi tablet computer for kids, has created $170 Star Wars-themed accessory bundles that include a new 7-inch table. They come with sound effects, themed wallpapers and stickers designed to let kids customize their tablets.

While most of the people buying Friday will be the die-hard collectors who have to have the hot items first, sales momentum will continue into the holiday shopping season as nostalgic parents introduce a new generation of kids to Star Wars, says Rob Maigret, Sphero’s chief creative officer.

“There’s just this evangelism that exists for the movie, because this movie is part of our lives, because we all have some sort of connection to it,” Maigret says.

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Saturday, June 13, 2015

YouTube to launch app, site dedicated to gaming


LOS ANGELES — YouTube is seeking to win over gamers.

The online video giant announced plans ahead of next week’s Electronic Entertainment Expo to launch a separate app and site specifically for fans of video games.

Ryan Wyatt, YouTube’s global head of gaming content, unveiled YouTube Gaming during an event Friday at YouTube Space LA, one of the site’s production facilities. He said YouTube Gaming will be a destination for users to find gaming videos, live streams and Internet personalities. sl

“Despite the crazy usage that gaming drives on YouTube, we’ve never really built gamers the experience that they deserve,” said Wyatt. “That’s something that changes today.”

The app and site, which is scheduled to debut in the U.S. and U.K. later this summer, will feature individual pages dedicated to more than 25,000 games.

YouTube product designer Jonathan Terleski demonstrated that if a user began searching for the word “call” on the YouTube Gaming app, the military shooter “Call of Duty,” not the Carly Rae Jepsen tune “Call Me Maybe” would appear first.


YouTube is also seeking to make it easier for users to broadcast live and competitive gaming, known as e-sports, by creating singular links that can be shared, removing the need to schedule a broadcast and promoting live broadcasts.

“YouTube Gaming is built from the ground up for gamers, by gamers,” said Wyatt. “No longer is gaming going to be lost in a sea of content. We’re unleashing a brand-new user experience that puts games front and center. That includes live gaming, as well.”

The move by Google-owned YouTube takes direct aim at Twitch, the gaming-centric streaming video site acquired by Amazon last year for nearly $1 billion. While YouTube remains the dominant online video site, Twitch has solidified itself over the past three years as a destination to stream gameplay from such titles as “League of Legends” and “Counter-Strike: Global Offensive.” Twitch now boasts 100 million users who watch 1.5 million broadcasters a month.

“We welcome new entrants into the growing list of competitors,” said Matthew DiPietro, Twitch’s vice president of marketing, in a statement. “Gaming video is obviously a huge market that others have their eye on. It inspires us to work even harder to make the community proud.”

YouTube Gaming will be previewed at YouTube’s booth on the E3 show floor beginning Tuesday.

The announcement of YouTube’s renewed focus on gaming once again signals the importance of online video on the eve of E3, the gaming industry’s annual trade show. While the interactive extravaganza is no longer broadcast live on TV cable channels such as Spike and G4, the surprise-laced press conferences and flashy game demonstrations attract millions of viewers on YouTube, Twitch and other online streaming services.

“The way you reach a gamer today is very different than the way you would 20 or even 10 years ago,” said Michael Gallagher, president of the Electronic Software Association, which organizes E3.

“It’s more direct. The consumers want the experience of video game debuts through the eyes and voices of true gamers,” Gallagher continued. “Now, those true gamers who can speak with enthusiasm about a new ‘Fallout’ or ‘Call of Duty’ are able to do it live and in person through streaming technology. It’s another example how the industry has matured and grown beyond traditional forms of media."

source: technology.inquirer.net

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Watch: Adam Levine goes butt naked in new music video


Adam Levine stripped to his birthday suit again in the music video of Maroon 5’s new single, “This Summer’s Gonna Hurt Like a Motherf—ker.”

The video shows Levine wrapped in a towel in his dressing room as he prepares for a show.

The music video was shot at the Wembley stadium in London and was directed by Levine and photographer Travis Schneider.

After performing before a packed stadium, the video showed the band leaving the venue.

As of posting, the video, which was released on Saturday on YouTube, has already gained 170,921 views.

Comments posted on YouTube said that they were watching the video because of The Voice coach’s butt: YouTube user kingkingjustiun said “Adam’s ass is trending” while ThisisAlan said  “0:28 is the most paused moment of YouTube on YouTube 2015,” pertaining to the point where Levine’s butt was exposed.

Levine is no stranger in shedding some skin in front of the camera. The Maroon 5 frontman and his wife, model Behati Prinsloo, went naked and shared a steamy scene in the “Animals” music video released last year.

The band will be performing in Manila on September 17.

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Monday, January 12, 2015

Key US military command’s Twitter, YouTube sites hacked


WASHINGTON—Hackers claiming to work on behalf of Islamic State militants seized control of the Twitter and YouTube sites of the military’s US Central Command on Monday. The Pentagon swiftly suspended the sites and said it appears that no classified material was breached.

The hacker group appears to be the same one that is under FBI investigation for hijacking the websites or Twitter feeds of media outlets in the last month, including a Maryland television station and a New Mexico newspaper.

The Central Command Twitter site was filled with threats that said “American soldiers, we are coming, watch your back.” Other postings appeared to list names, phone numbers and personal e-mail addresses of military personnel as well as PowerPoint slides and maps.

Most of the material was labeled “FOUO,” which means “For Official Use Only,” but none of it appeared to be classified or sensitive information, suggesting the hackers did not breach classified material.

One of the documents appeared to be slides developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Lincoln Laboratory, a federally funded research and development center focused on national security. The slides appeared to depict what it called “scenarios” for conflict with North Korea and China.

An ‘annoyance’


“This is little more than a prank or vandalism. It’s inconvenient and it’s an annoyance. But that’s all it is,” said Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman. “It in no way compromises our operations in any way shape or form.”

Warren said Pentagon officials are in contact with Twitter and YouTube to ensure that military passwords and other security for such public websites are adequate.

The tweets came shortly after US Central Command posted its own tweets about the US and partner nations continuing to attack Islamic State terrorists in Iraq and Syria and one repeating a report that said France will deploy an aircraft carrier to the fight.

The hackers titled the Central Command Twitter page “CyberCaliphate” with an underline that said “i love you isis.” And the broader message referred to the ongoing airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria and threatened, “We broke into your networks and personal devices and know everything about you. You’ll see no mercy infidels. ISIS is already here, we are in your PCs, in each military base.”

It added: “US soldiers! We’re watching you!”

The intrusion on the military Twitter account carried the same logo, CyberCaliphate name and photo that appeared on the Albuquerque Journal’s website in late December when one of its stories was hacked. And earlier this month, it appeared that the same hackers breached the Journal’s Twitter account and also took over the website and Twitter feed of WBOC-TV in Salisbury, Maryland.

The FBI at the time acknowledged it was looking into the Albuquerque case, and WBOC said it was also in contact with the agency.

Some IS militant videos also were posted on the Central Command’s YouTube site, purporting to show military operations and explosions.

“This is something we’re obviously looking into, and something we take seriously,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. But he cautioned against comparisons to the broader hack attack against Sony. “There’s a pretty significant difference between what is a large data breach and the hacking of a Twitter account,” he said.

A senior defense official confirmed that the two accounts were compromised and said US Central Command was taking appropriate measures to address the matter. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak about it publicly on the record.

The military suspended the Central Command Twitter site and terminated the YouTube site. This is not the first time that US government websites or other accounts have been hacked. It was not clear whether the site was attacked by the insurgent group or by sympathizers.–Lolita C. Baldor with Josh Lederman   

source: technology.inquirer.net

Monday, September 8, 2014

YouTube is the TV of the Future in Asia


MANILA, Philippines — “Online video is the biggest up and coming segment Google is promoting in emerging market,” proclaims an internet marketer professional.

“In terms of brand equity building in online advertising, video ads beat other formats,” says Jonathan Joson, regional platform strategy director of Red Fuse Communications during a recent lecture on social media in International Institute of Digital Marketing.

Apparently these days, Asian markets watch a lot of YouTube more than anything. In fact, Joson says some markets watch YouTube but don’t want TV at all.

Video has stickiness than search ads or any other form of online ads. Joson narrates the example of a popular coffee brand viral video starring a famous rock band and a viral video star in a parody of Japanese robot anime.

In just 15 days, the video reached 2 million views in YouTube, with as high as 400,000 views in a day.

Also during this period, the brand’s Facebook page earned 65,000 likes, 12,000 shares, and 5,000 comments. All-in-all, the coffee brand merited PHP39 million in media earned value and had a significant seven percent increase in sales.

The brand was able to tap the strength of its 4.5million Facebook fans but more than that, Joson acknowledged the strength of the video’s content.

“By tapping into popular culture and its talents’ popularity, the viral video was able to get hold of its viewers’ attention more than a 30-second or 60-second TV ad could do.”

Joson stressed that the success was not a fluke: it was the result of planned efforts that include ad support and promotion from other channels – because strategy is the key.

Learn how to execute an engaging social media marketing campaign in the Social Media Marketing Specialist Track of the CDM-IIDM Program.

Log on to imadigitalmarketer.com or call 0928 506 5382 for more details. advt

source: technology.inquirer.net



Sunday, January 19, 2014

Let’s get loud–without earphones


Music has become ubiquitous, and nowhere is this more apparent than in the tunes stored in our smartphones and MP3 players. Thousands of songs are available at the touch of a finger, and more can be accessed via the Internet through streaming services or YouTube.

We generally keep the songs to ourselves, the acoustic goodness enjoyed as a solo affair through earphones.

As a result, a certain sense of community has somehow been lost in time—the convenience of portability overwhelming an age-old tradition of listening, for example, to one’s album collection with friends on a bulky boombox.

But even the most powerful of mobile phone speakers can’t hold a candle to a good personal stereo or laptop to play music.

SuperTooth Disco 2

Then again, technology has filled the void by way of portable Bluetooth speakers. The latest and perhaps one of the best to be made available in the country so far is the SuperTooth Disco 2.

SuperTooth is a brand known for its line of portable Bluetooth speakers and accessories. The Disco 2 represents its most portable effort yet to amplify the sounds that we play on our phones and laptops.

At first glance, the Disco 2 immediately attracts, bearing an understated hourglass figure design—a refreshing look compared to the more gaudy and flashy speakers that we see in store shelves at the malls. It’s a bit heavier than other portable Bluetooth speakers, but this is explained by the 16-watt power output.

Unfortunately, the speaker can’t be charged via USB, and instead needs a 14-volt adapter that you have to carry around. But thankfully it comes with a carrying case.

Setting up the Disco 2 is very easy, requiring only a single-button press on the speaker itself, and a usual Bluetooth pairing with our phone. This is a great change from portable speakers with tangling wires, and finicky early Bluetooth speakers that took ages just to pair with a phone.

If needed, though, the Disco 2 still has a good old-fashioned 3.5-millimeter audio jack that can be used to connect to a laptop or an older music player that doesn’t have Bluetooth.

The sound it produces generates no less a good impression. Its maximum volume can fill up a medium-sized room; appropriately powerful bass and good midrange characterize its sound reproduction. But the higher treble ranges are drowned out past the Disco 2’s medium volume setting, and the entire unit rattles and distorts when the bass gets really heavy.

When testing the Disco 2, we also discover that the range is exactly as SuperTooth describes it—a good 10 meters. We are able to transmit audio to the Disco 2 even through concrete walls, though, of course, this noticeably lowers the range.







The connection it keeps with the phone is reliable, though one time, a strange, stuttering sound is heard for a few seconds.

The Disco 2 is not just your average, throwaway wireless speaker system. It’s a well-designed piece of audio equipment that breaks your music free from the personal tethers of earphones, while not being cumbersome, like having a laptop or large wired speaker setup will.

It brings back the wonderful experience of listening to music with friends, perfect for small gatherings or group parties.

Log on to www.supertooth.com.ph  and follow SuperTooth on Facebook (www.facebook.com/SuperToothPH)

Dancing with myself

THE FIRST time I got hold of the SuperTooth Disco 2 stereo speaker, I couldn’t figure out how to operate it, even with a manual.

That’s what happens to a 50-year-old geezer like me, who, despite having been a music fanatic all my life, still don’t know how to download a song on my smartphone—not entirely due to ignorance, but because I prefer listening to it without earphones.

Somehow I feel sad, disturbed even, when, for instance, I see people riding the MRT looking oblivious to everything around them as they get lost in the privacy of hearing their downloaded songs through headsets on their phones. Although I get curious when they start nodding their heads or tapping their feet, they end up looking stupid when they start singing loudly along to the lyrics of a song that has been muted from the outside world by their headsets.

Perhaps the good thing about the whole scene is that the rest of humanity in the train is spared of the atrocity of hearing what might turn out to be a lousy-sounding song, if it’s played through loudspeakers.

But back to the Disco 2. I had to seek the assistance of Anton, the 22-year-old techie son of a friend, to operate the portable wireless speaker, which, it turned out, needed to be fully charged to appreciate its optimum performance. That would take some two hours of plugging its adapter to an electric socket.

That’s about the only “hassle”; otherwise, it took just a few seconds to “pair” the Disco 2 to his smartphone. When Anton successfully turned the Disco 2 on with a Miles Davis tune from the legendary trumpeter’s 1969 album, “In a Silent Way,” the sound was rich and full, swirling and enveloping the den of the house of Anton’s grandparents at No. 13 Mayaman St. in UP Village, Quezon City.

When I took the Disco 2 to my apartment and plugged it into my laptop, I discovered that the audio playback’s quality depends on how the song was uploaded; if for example, the tune is from an HD (high-definition) audio clip from YouTube, then it’s guaranteed to give a splendid sound.

After listening to a “full album, stereo remastered” version of the Beatles’ 1965 album “Rubber Soul” from YouTube on the Disco 2, the more I was convinced that nothing beats music played on a speaker.

Now I’m looking for a good-quality version of Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky” and Bruno Mars’ “Treasure” to download, to test whether the Disco 2 is appropriately named.

In any case, I won’t mind dancing with myself. Pocholo Concepcion

source: lifestyle.inquirer.net