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Online video platform

An online video platform (OVP), provided by a video hosting service, enables users to upload, convert, store and play back video content on the Internet, often via a private server structured, large-scale system that may generate revenue. Users will generally upload video content via the hosting service's wesite, mobile or desktop application, or other interfaces (API). An example of an OVP is YouTube. The type of video content uploaded might be anything from shorts to full-length TV shows and movies. The video host stores the video on its server[1] and offers users the ability to enable different types of embed codes or links that allow others to view the video content. The website, mainly used as the video hosting website, is usually called the video-sharing website.

Purpose of video hosts (for users)

  • Save on bandwidth and hosting costs often eliminating costs entirely;
  • Creating a common place to share and view video content;
  • Making a user friendly experience, where uploading a video and streaming or embedding video does not require advanced programming knowledge. It is now commonly achieved through a web browser, and can be done by users with no programming experience.

Description

Online video platforms can use a software as a service (SaaS) business model, a do it yourself (DIY) model or user-generated content (UGC) model. The OVP comes with an end-to-end tool set to upload, encode, manage, playback, style, deliver, distribute, download, publish and measure quality of service or audience engagement quality of experience of online video content for both video on demand and live delivery. This is usually manifested as a User Interface with log-in credentials. OVPs also include providing a custom video player or a third-party video player that can be embedded in a website. Modern online video platforms are often coupled up with embedded online video analytics providing video publishers with detailed insights into video performance: the total number of video views, impressions, and unique views; video watch time, stats on user location, visits, and behavior on the site. Video heat maps show how user engagement rate changes through the viewing process in order to measure audience interaction[1] and to create compelling video content. OVPs are related to the over-the-top content video industry, although there are many OVP providers that are also present in broadcast markets, serving video on demand set-top boxes.

OVP product models vary in scale and feature-set, ranging from ready-made web sites that individuals can use, to white label models that can be customized by enterprise clients or media/content aggregators and integrated with their traditional broadcast workflows. The former example is YouTube. The latter example is predominantly found in FTA (Free-To-Air) or pay-TV broadcasters who seek to provide an over-the-top media service (OTT) that extends the availability of their content on desktops or multiple mobility devices.

In general, the graphical user interface accessed by users of the OVP is sold as a service. Revenue is derived from monthly subscriptions based on the number of users it is licensed to and the complexity of the workflow. Some workflows require encryption of content with DRM and this increases the cost of using the service. Videos may be transcoded from their original source format or resolution to a mezzanine format (suitable for management and mass-delivery), either on-site or using cloud computing. The latter would be where platform as a service, is provided as an additional cost.

It is feasible, but rare, for large broadcasters to develop their own proprietary OVP. However, this can require complex development and maintenance costs and diverts attention to 'building' as opposed to distributing/curating content.

OVPs often cooperate with specialized third-party service providers, using what they call an application programming interface (API). These include cloud transcoders, recommendation engines, search engines, metadata libraries and analytics providers.

Video and content delivery protocols

The vast majority of OVPs use industry-standard HTTP streaming or HTTP progressive download protocols. With HTTP streaming, the de facto standard is to use adaptive streaming where multiple files of a video are created at different bit rates, but only one of these is sent to the end-user during playback, depending on available bandwidth or device CPU constraints. This can be switched dynamically and near-seamlessly at any time during the video viewing. The main protocols for adaptive HTTP streaming include Smooth Streaming (by Microsoft), HTTP Live Streaming (HLS) (by Apple) and Flash Video (by Adobe). Flash is still in use but is declining due to the popularity of HLS and Smooth Stream in mobile devices and desktops, respectively.[citation needed] Each is a proprietary protocol in its own right and due to this fragmentation, there have been efforts to create one standardized protocol known as MPEG-DASH.

There are many OVPs available on the Internet.[2][3][4]

Influence

In the 2010s, with the increasing prevalence of technology and the Internet in everyday life, video hosting services serve as a portal to different forms of entertainment (comedy, shows, games, or music), news, documentaries and educational videos. Content may be either both user-generated, amateur clips or commercial products. The entertainment industry uses this medium to release music and videos, movies and television shows directly to the public. Since many users do not have unlimited web space, either as a paid service, or through an ISP offering, video hosting services are becoming increasingly popular, especially with the explosion in popularity of blogs, internet forums and other interactive pages. The mass market for camera phones and smartphones has increased the supply of user-generated video. Traditional methods of personal video distribution, such as making a DVD to show to friends at home, are unsuited to the low resolution and high volume of camera phone clips. In contrast, current broadband Internet connections are well suited to serving the quality of video shot on mobile phones. Most people do not own web servers, and this has created demand for user-generated video content hosting.[5][6]

Free video format support

Some websites prefer royalty-free video formats such as Theora (with Ogg) and VP8 (with WebM). In particular, the Wikipedia community advocates the Ogg format, and some websites now support searching specifically for WebM videos.

Copyright issues

On some websites, users share entire films by breaking them up into segments that are about the size of the video length limit imposed by the site (e.g., 15-minutes). An emerging practice is for users to obfuscate the titles of feature-length films that they share by providing a title that is recognizable by humans but will not match on standard search engines. It is not even in all cases obvious to the user if a provided video is a copyright infringement.

For privacy reasons, the users' comments are usually ignored by websites of the Internet preservation, as it happens in Web Archive, or in Archive.today copy saving.

Mobile video hosting

A more recent application of the video hosting services is in the mobile web 2.0 arena, where video and other mobile content can be delivered to, and easily accessed by mobile devices. While some video-hosting services like DaCast and Ustream have developed means by which video can be watched on mobile devices, mobile-oriented web-based frontends for video hosting services that possess equal access and capability to desktop-oriented web services have yet to be developed. A mobile live streaming software called Qik allows the users to upload videos from their cell phones to the internet. The videos will then be stored online and can be shared to various social networking sites like Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. Videos will be stored on the servers and can be watched from both the mobile devices and the website.

History

Practical online video hosting and video streaming was made possible by advances in video compression, due to the impractically high bandwidth requirements of uncompressed video. Raw uncompressed digital video has a bit rate of 168 Mbit/s for SD video, and over 1 Gbit/s for full HD video.[7] The most important data compression algorithm that enabled practical video hosting and streaming is the discrete cosine transform (DCT), a lossy compression technique first proposed by Nasir Ahmed, T. Natarajan and K. R. Rao in 1973.[8] The DCT algorithm is the basis for the first practical video coding format, H.261, in 1988.[9] It was followed by more popular DCT-based video coding formats, most notably the MPEG and H.26x video standards from 1991 onwards.[10] The modified discrete cosine transform (MDCT) is also the basis for the MP3 audio compression format introduced in 1994,[11] and later the Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) format in 1999.[12]

Video hosting sites

The first Internet video hosting site was ShareYourWorld.com.[13] Founded in 1997, it allowed users to upload clips or full videos in different file formats. However, Internet access bandwidth and video transcoding technology at the time were limited, so the site did not support video streaming like YouTube later did. ShareYourWorld was founded by Chase Norlin, and it ran until 2001, when it closed due to budget and bandwidth problems.[citation needed]

Founded in October 2004, Pandora TV from South Korea is the first video sharing website in the world to attach advertisements to user-submitted video clips and to provide unlimited storage space for users to upload their own clips. The company has developed an auto-advertisements system that automatically inserts advertising to the clips posted to the website. It was founded in the Gangnam District of Seoul.[14][15]

Video streaming platforms

YouTube was founded by Chad Hurley, Jawed Karim and Steve Chen in 2005. It was based on video transcoding technology, which enabled the video streaming of user-generated content from anywhere on the World Wide Web. This was made possible by implementing a Flash player based on MPEG-4 AVC video with AAC audio. This allowed any video coding format to be uploaded, and then transcoded into Flash-compatible AVC video that can be directly streamed from anywhere on the Web. The first YouTube video clip was Me at the zoo, uploaded by Karim in April 2005.[16]

YouTube subsequently became the most popular online video platform, and changed the way videos were hosted on the Web.[13] The success of YouTube led to a number of similar online video streaming platforms, from companies such as Netflix, Hulu and Crunchyroll.

Within these video streaming platforms like Netflix, Hulu, and YouTube, there are privacy concerns about how the websites use consumers' personal information and online behaviors to advertise and track spending. Many video streaming websites record semi-private consumer information such as video streaming data, purchase frequency, genre of videos watched, etc.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Use Video Analytics to know your audience – Cincopa | The Blog". www.cincopa.com. 26 May 2016. from the original on 11 May 2017. Retrieved 2017-02-08.
  2. ^ "Every Online Video Platform (OVP) on the Market: A Reference List". Onlinevideo.net – Online Video Marketing Strategies, News, and Tips. 2011-10-06. from the original on 2011-10-08. Retrieved 2017-02-08.
  3. ^ Dreier, Troy (5 June 2013). "Tips for Choosing an Online Video Platform (OVP) – Streaming Media Magazine". Streaming Media Magazine. from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 2017-02-08.
  4. ^ "Choose Wisely: Selecting An Online Video Platform". Streaming Media Europe Magazine. Spring 2010. from the original on 2017-02-11. Retrieved 2020-02-08.
  5. ^ "Recommended Online Video Hosting Services". Groundwire.org. from the original on 2016-03-10. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  6. ^ Apr 7 2006
  7. ^ Lee, Jack (2005). Scalable Continuous Media Streaming Systems: Architecture, Design, Analysis and Implementation. John Wiley & Sons. p. 25. ISBN 9780470857649. from the original on 2019-12-27. Retrieved 2019-09-18.
  8. ^ Nasir Ahmed (1991). "How I Came Up With the Discrete Cosine Transform". Digital Signal Processing. 1 (1): 4–5. doi:10.1016/1051-2004(91)90086-Z.
  9. ^ Ghanbari, Mohammed (2003). Standard Codecs: Image Compression to Advanced Video Coding. Institution of Engineering and Technology. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780852967102. from the original on 2019-08-08. Retrieved 2019-09-18.
  10. ^ Ce, Zhu (2010). Streaming Media Architectures, Techniques, and Applications: Recent Advances: Recent Advances. IGI Global. p. 26. ISBN 9781616928339. from the original on 2019-12-23. Retrieved 2019-09-18.
  11. ^ Guckert, John (Spring 2012). "The Use of FFT and MDCT in MP3 Audio Compression" (PDF). University of Utah. (PDF) from the original on 20 May 2018. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  12. ^ Brandenburg, Karlheinz (1999). "MP3 and AAC Explained" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2017-02-13. Retrieved 2019-09-18.
  13. ^ a b "First Video Sharing Site Paved the Way for YouTube — ShareYourWorld.com Was There First to Launch Ten Years Back". Beet.TV. from the original on 2014-01-21. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  14. ^ a b "Privacy Policy 2011-09-24 at the Wayback Machine." Pandora TV. Retrieved on September 17, 2011. "Seoul-Gangnam Building 5th Floor #727-16, Yeoksam-Dong, Gangnam-Gu Seoul, Korea 135-921"
  15. ^ "." Pandora TV. Retrieved on September 17, 2011. "Copyright Infringement Report Center Pandora TV Inc.5F. Seoul Gangnam Bldg, #727-16 Yeoksam-dong Gangnam-gu, Seoul 135-921, South Korea"
  16. ^ Matthew, Crick (2016). Power, Surveillance, and Culture in YouTube™'s Digital Sphere. IGI Global. pp. 36–7. ISBN 9781466698567.

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An online video platform OVP provided by a video hosting service enables users to upload convert store and play back video content on the Internet often via a private server structured large scale system that may generate revenue Users will generally upload video content via the hosting service s wesite mobile or desktop application or other interfaces API An example of an OVP is YouTube The type of video content uploaded might be anything from shorts to full length TV shows and movies The video host stores the video on its server 1 and offers users the ability to enable different types of embed codes or links that allow others to view the video content The website mainly used as the video hosting website is usually called the video sharing website Contents 1 Purpose of video hosts for users 2 Description 3 Video and content delivery protocols 4 Influence 5 Free video format support 6 Copyright issues 7 Mobile video hosting 8 History 8 1 Video hosting sites 8 2 Video streaming platforms 9 See also 10 ReferencesPurpose of video hosts for users EditSave on bandwidth and hosting costs often eliminating costs entirely Creating a common place to share and view video content Making a user friendly experience where uploading a video and streaming or embedding video does not require advanced programming knowledge It is now commonly achieved through a web browser and can be done by users with no programming experience Description EditOnline video platforms can use a software as a service SaaS business model a do it yourself DIY model or user generated content UGC model The OVP comes with an end to end tool set to upload encode manage playback style deliver distribute download publish and measure quality of service or audience engagement quality of experience of online video content for both video on demand and live delivery This is usually manifested as a User Interface with log in credentials OVPs also include providing a custom video player or a third party video player that can be embedded in a website Modern online video platforms are often coupled up with embedded online video analytics providing video publishers with detailed insights into video performance the total number of video views impressions and unique views video watch time stats on user location visits and behavior on the site Video heat maps show how user engagement rate changes through the viewing process in order to measure audience interaction 1 and to create compelling video content OVPs are related to the over the top content video industry although there are many OVP providers that are also present in broadcast markets serving video on demand set top boxes OVP product models vary in scale and feature set ranging from ready made web sites that individuals can use to white label models that can be customized by enterprise clients or media content aggregators and integrated with their traditional broadcast workflows The former example is YouTube The latter example is predominantly found in FTA Free To Air or pay TV broadcasters who seek to provide an over the top media service OTT that extends the availability of their content on desktops or multiple mobility devices In general the graphical user interface accessed by users of the OVP is sold as a service Revenue is derived from monthly subscriptions based on the number of users it is licensed to and the complexity of the workflow Some workflows require encryption of content with DRM and this increases the cost of using the service Videos may be transcoded from their original source format or resolution to a mezzanine format suitable for management and mass delivery either on site or using cloud computing The latter would be where platform as a service is provided as an additional cost It is feasible but rare for large broadcasters to develop their own proprietary OVP However this can require complex development and maintenance costs and diverts attention to building as opposed to distributing curating content OVPs often cooperate with specialized third party service providers using what they call an application programming interface API These include cloud transcoders recommendation engines search engines metadata libraries and analytics providers Video and content delivery protocols EditThe vast majority of OVPs use industry standard HTTP streaming or HTTP progressive download protocols With HTTP streaming the de facto standard is to use adaptive streaming where multiple files of a video are created at different bit rates but only one of these is sent to the end user during playback depending on available bandwidth or device CPU constraints This can be switched dynamically and near seamlessly at any time during the video viewing The main protocols for adaptive HTTP streaming include Smooth Streaming by Microsoft HTTP Live Streaming HLS by Apple and Flash Video by Adobe Flash is still in use but is declining due to the popularity of HLS and Smooth Stream in mobile devices and desktops respectively citation needed Each is a proprietary protocol in its own right and due to this fragmentation there have been efforts to create one standardized protocol known as MPEG DASH There are many OVPs available on the Internet 2 3 4 Influence EditIn the 2010s with the increasing prevalence of technology and the Internet in everyday life video hosting services serve as a portal to different forms of entertainment comedy shows games or music news documentaries and educational videos Content may be either both user generated amateur clips or commercial products The entertainment industry uses this medium to release music and videos movies and television shows directly to the public Since many users do not have unlimited web space either as a paid service or through an ISP offering video hosting services are becoming increasingly popular especially with the explosion in popularity of blogs internet forums and other interactive pages The mass market for camera phones and smartphones has increased the supply of user generated video Traditional methods of personal video distribution such as making a DVD to show to friends at home are unsuited to the low resolution and high volume of camera phone clips In contrast current broadband Internet connections are well suited to serving the quality of video shot on mobile phones Most people do not own web servers and this has created demand for user generated video content hosting 5 6 Free video format support EditSome websites prefer royalty free video formats such as Theora with Ogg and VP8 with WebM In particular the Wikipedia community advocates the Ogg format and some websites now support searching specifically for WebM videos Copyright issues EditOn some websites users share entire films by breaking them up into segments that are about the size of the video length limit imposed by the site e g 15 minutes An emerging practice is for users to obfuscate the titles of feature length films that they share by providing a title that is recognizable by humans but will not match on standard search engines It is not even in all cases obvious to the user if a provided video is a copyright infringement For privacy reasons the users comments are usually ignored by websites of the Internet preservation as it happens in Web Archive or in Archive today copy saving Mobile video hosting EditA more recent application of the video hosting services is in the mobile web 2 0 arena where video and other mobile content can be delivered to and easily accessed by mobile devices While some video hosting services like DaCast and Ustream have developed means by which video can be watched on mobile devices mobile oriented web based frontends for video hosting services that possess equal access and capability to desktop oriented web services have yet to be developed A mobile live streaming software called Qik allows the users to upload videos from their cell phones to the internet The videos will then be stored online and can be shared to various social networking sites like Twitter Facebook and YouTube Videos will be stored on the servers and can be watched from both the mobile devices and the website History EditPractical online video hosting and video streaming was made possible by advances in video compression due to the impractically high bandwidth requirements of uncompressed video Raw uncompressed digital video has a bit rate of 168 Mbit s for SD video and over 1 Gbit s for full HD video 7 The most important data compression algorithm that enabled practical video hosting and streaming is the discrete cosine transform DCT a lossy compression technique first proposed by Nasir Ahmed T Natarajan and K R Rao in 1973 8 The DCT algorithm is the basis for the first practical video coding format H 261 in 1988 9 It was followed by more popular DCT based video coding formats most notably the MPEG and H 26x video standards from 1991 onwards 10 The modified discrete cosine transform MDCT is also the basis for the MP3 audio compression format introduced in 1994 11 and later the Advanced Audio Coding AAC format in 1999 12 Video hosting sites Edit The first Internet video hosting site was ShareYourWorld com 13 Founded in 1997 it allowed users to upload clips or full videos in different file formats However Internet access bandwidth and video transcoding technology at the time were limited so the site did not support video streaming like YouTube later did ShareYourWorld was founded by Chase Norlin and it ran until 2001 when it closed due to budget and bandwidth problems citation needed Founded in October 2004 Pandora TV from South Korea is the first video sharing website in the world to attach advertisements to user submitted video clips and to provide unlimited storage space for users to upload their own clips The company has developed an auto advertisements system that automatically inserts advertising to the clips posted to the website It was founded in the Gangnam District of Seoul 14 15 Video streaming platforms Edit YouTube was founded by Chad Hurley Jawed Karim and Steve Chen in 2005 It was based on video transcoding technology which enabled the video streaming of user generated content from anywhere on the World Wide Web This was made possible by implementing a Flash player based on MPEG 4 AVC video with AAC audio This allowed any video coding format to be uploaded and then transcoded into Flash compatible AVC video that can be directly streamed from anywhere on the Web The first YouTube video clip was Me at the zoo uploaded by Karim in April 2005 16 YouTube subsequently became the most popular online video platform and changed the way videos were hosted on the Web 13 The success of YouTube led to a number of similar online video streaming platforms from companies such as Netflix Hulu and Crunchyroll Within these video streaming platforms like Netflix Hulu and YouTube there are privacy concerns about how the websites use consumers personal information and online behaviors to advertise and track spending Many video streaming websites record semi private consumer information such as video streaming data purchase frequency genre of videos watched etc 14 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Video hosting Comparison of video hosting services Flash Video Flash Fliggo List of online video platforms Online video analytics Streaming mediaReferences Edit a b Use Video Analytics to know your audience Cincopa The Blog www cincopa com 26 May 2016 Archived from the original on 11 May 2017 Retrieved 2017 02 08 Every Online Video Platform OVP on the Market A Reference List Onlinevideo net Online Video Marketing Strategies News and Tips 2011 10 06 Archived from the original on 2011 10 08 Retrieved 2017 02 08 Dreier Troy 5 June 2013 Tips for Choosing an Online Video Platform OVP Streaming Media Magazine Streaming Media Magazine Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 2017 02 08 Choose Wisely Selecting An Online Video Platform Streaming Media Europe Magazine Spring 2010 Archived from the original on 2017 02 11 Retrieved 2020 02 08 Recommended Online Video Hosting Services Groundwire org Archived from the original on 2016 03 10 Retrieved 2014 01 19 Ten video sharing services compared Apr 7 2006 Lee Jack 2005 Scalable Continuous Media Streaming Systems Architecture Design Analysis and Implementation John Wiley amp Sons p 25 ISBN 9780470857649 Archived from the original on 2019 12 27 Retrieved 2019 09 18 Nasir Ahmed 1991 How I Came Up With the Discrete Cosine Transform Digital Signal Processing 1 1 4 5 doi 10 1016 1051 2004 91 90086 Z Ghanbari Mohammed 2003 Standard Codecs Image Compression to Advanced Video Coding Institution of Engineering and Technology pp 1 2 ISBN 9780852967102 Archived from the original on 2019 08 08 Retrieved 2019 09 18 Ce Zhu 2010 Streaming Media Architectures Techniques and Applications Recent Advances Recent Advances IGI Global p 26 ISBN 9781616928339 Archived from the original on 2019 12 23 Retrieved 2019 09 18 Guckert John Spring 2012 The Use of FFT and MDCT in MP3 Audio Compression PDF University of Utah Archived PDF from the original on 20 May 2018 Retrieved 14 July 2019 Brandenburg Karlheinz 1999 MP3 and AAC Explained PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2017 02 13 Retrieved 2019 09 18 a b First Video Sharing Site Paved the Way for YouTube ShareYourWorld com Was There First to Launch Ten Years Back Beet TV Archived from the original on 2014 01 21 Retrieved 2014 01 19 a b Privacy Policy Archived 2011 09 24 at the Wayback Machine Pandora TV Retrieved on September 17 2011 Seoul Gangnam Building 5th Floor 727 16 Yeoksam Dong Gangnam Gu Seoul Korea 135 921 Report Personal Rights Violation Pandora TV Retrieved on September 17 2011 Copyright Infringement Report Center Pandora TV Inc 5F Seoul Gangnam Bldg 727 16 Yeoksam dong Gangnam gu Seoul 135 921 South Korea Matthew Crick 2016 Power Surveillance and Culture in YouTube s Digital Sphere IGI Global pp 36 7 ISBN 9781466698567 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Online video platform amp oldid 1144146301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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