| ▲ | swatcoder 3 hours ago | |||||||
By being a paying subscriber, you've indicated: * that you grow attached to video content if they can get in front of you * that you have disposable income * that you're willing to spend disposable income on video content and probably other things * that people associated with you, those you network with on their system and those you share content with via links, are more likely to share one or more of these traits with you, compared to people they know nothing about By paying them, you've inherently invited them to try to squeeze more value from you and betrayed that your own social network probably includes many similarly ripe marks for subscription sales or effective ads. So pushing the content they think best represents their future income streams, in hopes that you eventually grow attached to it, or at least occassionally share it with your network of ripe marks, is of course going to be their strategy. In the modern marketplace, subscriptions don't buy you out of ads or capitalist annoyances, they just suggest that you're an even more valuable target for sales and marketing than those who haven't. | ||||||||
| ▲ | valar_m 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Why would a user who hates shorts so much that they want to disable them in the app be sharing links to shorts with their friends? If a paying user want to disable shorts, wouldn't allowing that ability make it more likely they will continue to pay? The reason I started paying for Youtube premium was to turn off the ads. I hate YT shorts and I get annoyed when I accidentally open one. If YT continues to shove shorts down our throats, I'll probably cancel my subscription because I hate shorts that much. | ||||||||
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