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I use uBlock Origin. No ads, ever. And you get access to all the music uploaded to YouTube.

$0.00/month


For many years I've used a few shell scripts to turn YouTube into a "radio" of sorts, basically going through search results for a specific term (usually a music genre) and playing each one. It works pretty well, and the only ad-like experience is when it decides to play something not-really-related-nor-actually-music that just showed up in the results, but IMHO the "what was that?" aspect is part of the fun.

I'm clearly not the only one who came up with such an idea:

https://github.com/mps-youtube/mps-youtube


You seem to have a unique perspective based on your comment history. Could you explain why or why not you see F/G as monopolistic forces? I have no opinion on the matter, but I'm trying to understand.


I think the all or nothing discussion linked to the word monopoly is what causes most of the issue.

Abuse of dominant market position is the most accurate developed term of art to describe what these firms do. But the devil is in the details - the treatment, definition and remedies associated with the offense are fairly arcande, and seemingly innocuous terms can make or break the entire framework.

Here's the EU's brief blurb on the issue:

http://ec.europa.eu/competition/consumers/abuse_en.html http://ec.europa.eu/competition/antitrust/overview_en.html

This is, however, just the basic 101 theory. The reality is a lot less rosy. In actuality, almost every level of the pro-competitive state regulatory framework is subverted, and that's by design. A state benefits from corporations that abuse their dominant market position and act anticompetitively if the harm suffered is less than the benefits. For instance, if the harm is primarily suffered in foreign markets, or by a different financial class, etc.


Ignorant? It's a well known fact that European tech salaries (especially SWE salaries) are dwarfed by American/SV salaries. Just look up the difference in what GOOGLE pays its American vs EU employees. This doesn't even take into account taxation rate, which is favorable in US.

Virtually every "How much do you earn?" thread that pops up on HN has loads of comments with Europeans being surprised at the amount of money Americans make in tech.

Further - right now America is close to uncontested in the amount of technology it is producing and exporting. The only widely used European software I can think of is SAP. America is winning the talent war. I've only had a few friends who moved from US to Europe for tech work - and in all cases it had nothing to do with the job. Had more to do with wanting to "explore new places". On the other hand, I know tonnes of Euros, Indians, and Chinese who have come to US to work.


Those Europeans surprised at the the amount of money Americans make evidently aren't working in America. Maybe that tautologically makes them not the best, but I doubt it. Sometimes a "good enough" salary at a place you're comfortable beats an astronomical salary that requires moving to Silicon Valley.

That you personally only know few people who moved to Europe from the US but many who moved to the US probably says more about your location than about general trends. I know only few Germans who moved to the US for work, but many Americans, Iranians and Chinese who moved to Berlin. But that's where I live, so it's to be expected.


It's going to get even more extreme in the near future. Tesla is embarrassing all of the German auto manufacturers mightily. I think they'll need one or two to go down before they break out of their complacency.


It's forecast that Germany will lose around 1/3 of its auto industry jobs over the next few decades, in the switch to electric vehicles. Areas of auto manufacturing that they are very good at, are simply going to go away when everything is electric.

I would expect BMW to struggle the most among the German giants, if Tesla doesn't stop growing soon. The rise of Mercedes back to top form was a bad enough of a hit for BMW, then Tesla comes along poised to sell $40 billion worth of cars every year in the near future (all of which cost far more than ~$35k, which is a direct shot at all the luxury makers).

Germany is sitting in a great position nationally (epic trade surplus, good national finances, and reasonably fine household finances), now is the time to aggressively invest if you're them, to try to build out a large number of new technology jobs.


>First, mining uranium is not exactly environmentally friendly and those involved in the mining process are at a considerably higher risk of lung and non-lung cancers.

Hey buddy, the mining isn't much cleaner for the lithium, the cobalt, the REEs, the copper, or really anything required for PVs or the batteries which store their energy. And at least most of the uranium supply is in developed countries.


This seems off-topic, more political than an interesting new phenomenon.


More like:

1) to reduce dependency on foreign oil

2) to reduce local pollution

3) to establish global dominance in batteries and vehicles.

-----POWERGAP-----

4) to counter global climate change


curious, how would this prevent being captured on camera? isn't visible light used?


If the pants reflect whole spectrum, then it should be reasonably obscured from cameras. I think GP did not mean mere IR reflectiveness.


I'd bet the majority of the money was spent on recruiting the e-celebs to the platform.


Seems like a fad to me. I wonder if/when Instagram will replicate the lip-syncing feature. I personally am not attracted to the app at all and find the videos pretty toe-curling. But I'm curious to see how far it goes.

Another thought - TikTok seems to be really popular with young teens. I wonder if Douyin (the version for China) appeals to the same age demographic and if users are doing more with the app than the lip-sync


I guess they are similar, but Douyin in China has much more diverse content, covering food/skits, or just funny video in general, while US version seems more heavily focused on dancing/lip-sync.


TikTok is pretty Douyin, but an international version.


Anyone who wears "AirPods" is a massive cookie cutter. I lose respect for people the instant I see those things in their ears


Why? They're a good product.


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