Unless you're doing something unusual, it's probably because you're browsing youtube without being logged in.
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If everyone on the fediverse goes to google.com right now and searches for "best new iphone car insurance shopping aarp member bad credit" maybe we can save the economy.
Who are all these extremist wackos who don't already want to abolish capitalism?
You might think that things have changed over the years, but I was around in 1995 and I can assure you this looked exactly as ridiculous then as it does now.
AI that is used to monitor cameras and identify our faces to track everywhere everyone goes: Why would that concern you? Do you have something to hide, citizen?
AI that might be used to generate agitprop, competing with conventional advertising: HOLY SHIT we need a new international treaty right away!
It's a bank! It's a dating app! It's a video hosting service, a town square, a shopping mall, a floor wax AND a dessert topping! Why go anywhere else? Just stare at the middle of the big shiny X until it makes sense!
It's yet another scheme to gather data about Chrome users for the benefit of advertisers. Aside from the fundamental problems with that whole idea which people most often point to, it's also underhanded in a way that cookies, tracking scripts, and browser fingerprinting aren't: It's code that's built in to the web browser itself which exists for no purpose other than to act directly against the interests of its users. It may be the first time that's happened in such an obvious and unambiguous way.
It sounds like pretty close to the same thing except for the "if you intend to monetize it" part which is a very big difference. But I don't think Twitch or Youtube or the other platforms where significant money can be made have any support for anonymous payment methods, so that situation is not so different in Germany compared to the rest of the world (outside of China and places like that.)
More importantly, we should stop giving Mastercard our data. Paying for everything with credit cards has been an obviously bad idea since thirty years ago at latest.
I've just noticed that this is in c/piracy. I suppose there's lots of interest in the story here and everywhere else, but I'd just like to remind you all that ad-blocking is not piracy.
This is the best summary I could come up with: It's "members of Congress, conservative activists and wealthy tech investors."