Viral Video and the Rise of YouTube
Mr. Spock gives a behind-the-scenes tour in Star Trek Cribs -- The Director's Cut. hide caption
Mr. Spock gives a behind-the-scenes tour in Star Trek Cribs -- The Director's Cut.
In just six months, YouTube boomed from a startup viral video site to a Web phenomenon, a virtual library of cultural highlights and amateur video clips uploaded by anybody with a digital camcorder and some time to burn.
Users upload 50,000 videos a day, at last count, and visitors watch 50 million clips per day. Not bad for a company with 26 employees and an office over a pizza parlor.
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Note: Some YouTube posts use language that might be considered objectionable.
The site is funded by venture capitalists. Despite its enormous popularity, it remains to be seen how YouTube will make money.
Guests discuss the future of YouTube: Is it free publicity -- or copyright infringement?
Guests:
Thomas Goetz, deputy editor of Wired magazine
Mike Miliard, staff writer for the Boston Phoenix
Paul Kedrosky, writes the "Infectious Greed" blog