Vessel - The New Early Access Paid Youtube Subscription
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Ever wanted to see Content from Youtube creators (as well as others) before they post it publicly. A new subscription based site hopes to be just that, Vessel Founded by former Hulu CEO Jason Kilar. Suposedly if you signed up for the service now you get a year free with no credit card required after that it will be $2.99/month
http://www.tubefilter.com/2015/01/21/jason-kilar-vessel-launch-beta/
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Ever wanted to see Content from Youtube creators (as well as others) before they post it publicly.
Can't say that I have.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
Ever wanted to see Content from Youtube creators (as well as others) before they post it publicly.
Can't say that I have.
Agreed, it has never occurred to me to want such a thing. And now that I've heard about it, I still can't figure out why I'd want it.
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It just means content providers will now delay public release in order to extract some revenue from suckers, I mean "super fans", rather than release stuff publicly, for free, straight away.
I would definitely pay for a lot of content that I currently watch on Youtube for free, but no-one seems to have figured out the best way of facilitating that yet, so there is plenty of scope for new business models.
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I've not found stuff on YouTube that I would pay for. I don't mind seeing some ads but FailArmy and Honest Trailers are the main things that I watch that are not videos from my friends - which I am definitely not going to pay to see.
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What about a video of me singing Taylor Swift in my underwear?
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Well I might pay for that, as long as it isn't "Shake It Off".
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@scottalanmiller said:
Well I might pay for that, as long as it isn't "Shake It Off".
Hey, I love that song!
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Nope.
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Never interested me either.
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I looked into this when it was first announced. It seemed like the vast majority of viewers thought this didn't really provide value to their content consumption. They will probably get a few subscribers but I really doubt most people will pay to watch early content. Maybe if it wasn't released anywhere else... but there is so much stuff on Youtube I doubt it would really matter if one content creator went this route.
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So the MangoLassi Venture Capital arm has given is a unaminous thumbs down. I now expect Google to buy it for $10bn in 12 months time
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@Carnival-Boy said:
So the MangoLassi Venture Capital arm has given is a unaminous thumbs down. I now expect Google to buy it for $10bn in 12 months time
Why would Google buy something from Youtube when it owns Youtube?
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@Carnival-Boy said:
So the MangoLassi Venture Capital arm has given is a unaminous thumbs down. I now expect Google to buy it for $10bn in 12 months time
Maybe not Google... Microsoft though has been making some great investments of late....
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@thanksajdotcom said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
So the MangoLassi Venture Capital arm has given is a unaminous thumbs down. I now expect Google to buy it for $10bn in 12 months time
Why would Google buy something from Youtube when it owns Youtube?
Not a Youtube/Google company, it is a startup from a former Hulu exec.
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@coliver said:
@thanksajdotcom said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
So the MangoLassi Venture Capital arm has given is a unaminous thumbs down. I now expect Google to buy it for $10bn in 12 months time
Why would Google buy something from Youtube when it owns Youtube?
Not a Youtube/Google company, it is a startup from a former Hulu exec.
Oh ok. I saw it was a former Hulu exec but missed it wasn't YouTube actually doing it.
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Although it will be interesting to see how this goes. It is another attempt to properly monetize content distribution that resembles premium cable channels. I'm not sure how many creators would be willing to have another entity, on top of Google, take a cut from their already small ad-revenue stream.
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Tech News 2Night talked about this yesterday. The host asked the guest story writer why would people want this since almost anything on Youtube can often be found in many other locations around the web.
The guest author said that Vessel content providers will provide content in Vessel days or weeks before other free sites (stated above), and new content that amounts to daily news style snips of events that millennials would rather watch than the whole event. The example given was a hockey game. Instead of having to watch a whole hockey game, it will be edited down to the 2-3 good goals, or maybe a 'great' save and a score.
Really? Millennials don't want to watch the game anymore... just give you the highlights?
AJ is that true? LOL Sorry bro, had to pick.
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@Dashrender said:
Tech News 2Night talked about this yesterday. The host asked the guest story writer why would people want this since almost anything on Youtube can often be found in many other locations around the web.
The guest author said that Vessel content providers will provide content in Vessel days or weeks before other free sites (stated above), and new content that amounts to daily news style snips of events that millennials would rather watch than the whole event. The example given was a hockey game. Instead of having to watch a whole hockey game, it will be edited down to the 2-3 good goals, or maybe a 'great' save and a score.
Really? Millennials don't want to watch the game anymore... just give you the highlights?
AJ is that true? LOL Sorry bro, had to pick.
I'd say this is probably an accurate statement for some people who just want to know what others are talking about on the facebooks the next day. Although I dislike the negative connotations that millenial now has/always had.
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Aren't those snippets called, wait for it.. the sports, etc news?