JoshuaFalken

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 36 points 1 week ago

“Ireland does not give preferential tax treatment to any companies or taxpayers,” stated a spokesperson from the Irish Ministry of Finances.

I wish the media would eviscerate these people like they used to.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Oddly enough, last year I used dish soap in the laundry for a few months without noticing, and nothing like this happened. I was surprised when I looked it up and saw this kind of thing as a common occurrence. Couldn't believe I had picked up this container each weekend for months without noticing the picture of plates and glasses on the front.

I understand now these soaps are quite different from one another and the fact nothing happened to me is a fluke, so definitely don't do this on purpose.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago

These things happen to everyone from time to time.

I myself misworded some comments just the other day in frustration and inadvertently caused an upset. No worries at all. It's big of you to come in here and correct yourself. It speaks volumes to the type of person you are.

Cheers.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 3 weeks ago (5 children)

I've been using Organic Maps (from F-Droid) and it has a "Keep the screen on" option in the settings. That said, I've never had the screen dim while navigating to a destination. The setting I mentioned prevents timeout when you've got the map open but not on route somewhere.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 month ago (1 children)

The saxophone battle that unfurled on the New York City subway ten years ago comes to mind.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 month ago

The burger turned ten years old back in 2019. Sadly, it looks like the live stream is no more, and perhaps neither is the hostel that was the burgers home.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Does your name happen to be David?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Seems to me a bulk of your standpoint is not wanting greedy people to suck up profits from the people doing the actual work. I agree. Where we disagree, I think, is how this could be accomplished. A non profit makes sense. There is a method (pdf warning) for the board to convert to for profit while retaining assets, which would be a sad move. Not so sure it would turn scandalous, given everything else that goes on these days, but I'm sure the creators on the platform would have something to say about such a move. If it ever happened, I would hope they would abandon ship so to speak.

Though like you say, when the service turns that direction, subscriptions could be cancelled and we could subscribe to another one. This raises a question that I hadn't considered until now. You mention this isn't some idealistic option, that it's something that's already been done. So what's it called? I've never heard of a registered non profit YouTube competitor that does what we're talking about, let alone a few of these organizations to allow people the possibility of bouncing between them.

If I can't go subscribe to these services right now, because they don't exist, then surely we are talking about an idealistic scenario. If they do exist, I would love to subscribe to them instead of talking about them in the abstract. I'm sure it's no surprise that I like Nebula, but I'll check out alternatives.

You've made me realise something about Nebulas proportional cut. While it is based on watch time, I'd thought it was cut on a user to user basis. For example (let's ignore the operating costs for ease), if you only watched one creator in a month, that creator would get the entire $2.50 share of your subscription. Or, if you watched an hour of video from two creators, each would get $1.25.

After looking at the info on their site again, I'm not sure why I thought this. They only say that it's based on view time. Which could mean they look at site wide view times instead of per user, and divvy up the money that way. Off the top of my head, I'm not sure this would make much of a difference, but it feels like it would. I'll do a bit of math later to see.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I believe your point was that non profits are superior. My counter was simply that, yes, they are superior to a public company, however they are not infallible to fact that people run them, and people are corruptable.

Forgive me but I'm not sure what to say about the second bit there. Nebula being created and owned by people that needed something like it in the first place is not ideal? Or not because of the people specifically, but because of its closed sourced design and profit sharing ratio? Maybe I'm misunderstanding you.

At the end of the day, I would prefer each creator host their own content on their own site, with it being sort of subscribable through an RSS feed or similar so people can use whatever front end they want. Like how podcasts work. Have a feed for sponsorships available for free, and a paid feed with no sponsorships and maybe bonus content.

I'd not heard of Ko-fi, but it looks interesting. On the face of it, it's pretty close to what I described above without the creatives themselves having to fuss about with the technical details of hosting all their content. I'll look into it more another day, thanks.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Not to be rude, but unless you're an Alphabet executive, what do you know. Same as me - not much.

My guess is they aren't losing money on YouTube these days, but feel free to look at the 2023 10-K and let me know if you find something in there that no one else has.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I understand it's expensive to facilitate streaming, though between the 15 billion from Premium subscribers to the 30 billion in ad revenue, it's not hard to imagine they make a few billion after costs. I'm not trying to say it's half of Alphabet's income or anything.

Unfortunately, it's not something anyone outside of the executive suite can say with a single degree of certainty since Alphabet doesn't make it known one way or the other.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Ultimately, people do have to be trusted. Even the best non profit in the land can find itself a board of directors that decide to convert the organisation to a for profit model, then in turn go public.

As far as supporting individual creators, Nebula was created by a group of YouTube creators. They got it off the ground by keeping the opportunity cost as low as they could, and by enticing people with the 50:50 split profit from the subscriptions.

What's more than this though, is that everyone making content on Nebula has an ownership stake. This is discussed in this video at 11:00, but the highlight is this: if the platform is ever sold, the creators get half the money from the sale.

Non profit is one thing, but the platform being employee owned I think provides greater motivation to grow.

view more: next ›