Quote from: Arjun Krishna Lal on May 18, 2020, 17:11:39Quote from: Lightkeeper on May 18, 2020, 14:05:10
"millions of Indian YouTube users who are forced to watch YouTube videos at a paltry 480p."
I mean, it's not like anyone is forced to watch YouTube. YouTube is not some universal human right, it's a profit-aimed website and it can do whatever it feels like. I live in Czechia, and we often get the lower quality products than customers in Germany from same manufacturer (e.g. juice has lower percentage of fruit but it's the same product that costs the same money). But am I going to complain about discrimination? No, because nobody forces me to buy it. If I don't like the product, I can buy juice from other manufacturer or just drink water. To sum it up - entitlement tastes like spikes, so don't be upset that YouTube lowers the quality in your country, be happy that it's available there in a first place... You will be much happier in life if you look at things this way! :)
I understand where you're coming from with that particular argument. I spent half my life in the US. Even things likes Cheetos taste better over there because they're made to higher quality standard. But I feel that's missing the point about what the Internet has become. The UN declared Internet access a fundamental human right back in 2016. Seen from that perspective, the top internet platforms in the world, sites like YouTube, social media platforms, and search engines are more akin to public utilities. Yes, YouTube, Google, Facebook, and others are private entities. But they're not just providing a one-off service. They're public utility providers in the same way that a private electricity distributor is a utility provider. There are so many people using YouTube for e-learning. So many people make informed purchase decisions after watching YouTube videos. It would be like if your power or water distributor decided to deliver an inferior water or electricity supply to some people and not others. Calling that out isn't entitlement, I feel.
Quote from: Lightkeeper on May 18, 2020, 14:05:10
"millions of Indian YouTube users who are forced to watch YouTube videos at a paltry 480p."
I mean, it's not like anyone is forced to watch YouTube. YouTube is not some universal human right, it's a profit-aimed website and it can do whatever it feels like. I live in Czechia, and we often get the lower quality products than customers in Germany from same manufacturer (e.g. juice has lower percentage of fruit but it's the same product that costs the same money). But am I going to complain about discrimination? No, because nobody forces me to buy it. If I don't like the product, I can buy juice from other manufacturer or just drink water. To sum it up - entitlement tastes like spikes, so don't be upset that YouTube lowers the quality in your country, be happy that it's available there in a first place... You will be much happier in life if you look at things this way! :)
Quote from: EZIO on May 18, 2020, 15:26:12Quote from: Lightkeeper on May 18, 2020, 14:05:10
"millions of Indian YouTube users who are forced to watch YouTube videos at a paltry 480p."
I mean, it's not like anyone is forced to watch YouTube. YouTube is not some universal human right, it's a profit-aimed website and it can do whatever it feels like. I live in Czechia, and we often get the lower quality products than customers in Germany from same manufacturer (e.g. juice has lower percentage of fruit but it's the same product that costs the same money). But am I going to complain about discrimination? No, because nobody forces me to buy it. If I don't like the product, I can buy juice from other manufacturer or just drink water. To sum it up - entitlement tastes like spikes, so don't be upset that YouTube lowers the quality in your country, be happy that it's available there in a first place... You will be much happier in life if you look at things this way! :)
I think you are doing the same, forcing your thoughts on the editor.
Quote from: EZIO on May 18, 2020, 15:26:12Quote from: Lightkeeper on May 18, 2020, 14:05:10
"millions of Indian YouTube users who are forced to watch YouTube videos at a paltry 480p."
I mean, it's not like anyone is forced to watch YouTube. YouTube is not some universal human right, it's a profit-aimed website and it can do whatever it feels like. I live in Czechia, and we often get the lower quality products than customers in Germany from same manufacturer (e.g. juice has lower percentage of fruit but it's the same product that costs the same money). But am I going to complain about discrimination? No, because nobody forces me to buy it. If I don't like the product, I can buy juice from other manufacturer or just drink water. To sum it up - entitlement tastes like spikes, so don't be upset that YouTube lowers the quality in your country, be happy that it's available there in a first place... You will be much happier in life if you look at things this way! :)
I think you are doing the same, forcing your thoughts on the editor.
Quote from: Lightkeeper on May 18, 2020, 14:05:10
"millions of Indian YouTube users who are forced to watch YouTube videos at a paltry 480p."
I mean, it's not like anyone is forced to watch YouTube. YouTube is not some universal human right, it's a profit-aimed website and it can do whatever it feels like. I live in Czechia, and we often get the lower quality products than customers in Germany from same manufacturer (e.g. juice has lower percentage of fruit but it's the same product that costs the same money). But am I going to complain about discrimination? No, because nobody forces me to buy it. If I don't like the product, I can buy juice from other manufacturer or just drink water. To sum it up - entitlement tastes like spikes, so don't be upset that YouTube lowers the quality in your country, be happy that it's available there in a first place... You will be much happier in life if you look at things this way! :)
Quote from: t4n0n on May 18, 2020, 14:50:29Quote from: Unknown on May 18, 2020, 14:35:40::)Quote from: Lightkeeper on May 18, 2020, 14:05:10
"millions of Indian YouTube users who are forced to watch YouTube videos at a paltry 480p."
I mean, it's not like anyone is forced to watch YouTube. YouTube is not some universal human right, it's a profit-aimed website and it can do whatever it feels like. I live in Czechia, and we often get the lower quality products than customers in Germany from same manufacturer (e.g. juice has lower percentage of fruit but it's the same product that costs the same money). But am I going to complain about discrimination? No, because nobody forces me to buy it. If I don't like the product, I can buy juice from other manufacturer or just drink water. To sum it up - entitlement tastes like spikes, so don't be upset that YouTube lowers the quality in your country, be happy that it's available there in a first place... You will be much happier in life if you look at things this way! :)
Completely agree
I think you completely miss the author's point. He's questioning why Indian users get penalised, when they make up a relatively small part of the demand whilst being a not insubstantial part of the market.
On the face of it, it seems unreasonable and inconsistent to limit Indian viewers, whilst allowing countries that have similar income revenues to have much better quality.
Not to mention, I can imagine the degree of inequality is far higher in India than Eastern Europe, so the people with access to YouTube in India are likely to have incomes considerably higher than the GDP per capita anyway.
Quote from: Unknown on May 18, 2020, 14:35:40::)Quote from: Lightkeeper on May 18, 2020, 14:05:10
"millions of Indian YouTube users who are forced to watch YouTube videos at a paltry 480p."
I mean, it's not like anyone is forced to watch YouTube. YouTube is not some universal human right, it's a profit-aimed website and it can do whatever it feels like. I live in Czechia, and we often get the lower quality products than customers in Germany from same manufacturer (e.g. juice has lower percentage of fruit but it's the same product that costs the same money). But am I going to complain about discrimination? No, because nobody forces me to buy it. If I don't like the product, I can buy juice from other manufacturer or just drink water. To sum it up - entitlement tastes like spikes, so don't be upset that YouTube lowers the quality in your country, be happy that it's available there in a first place... You will be much happier in life if you look at things this way! :)
Completely agree