Skip to main content

Yahoo is launching a YouTube competitor this summer

As if there weren’t already enough cat videos and makeup tutorials on the Web, new reports suggest that Yahoo will finally launch its long-awaited video-streaming service. Competitor YouTube and other companies have reportedly given Yahoo a lot of pushback, delaying the service’s debut for months. Now, it seems that the contract issues have finally been resolved and it’s all systems go for Yahoo’s video venture.

According to Ad Age, Yahoo is in talks with several video producers, creators, and advertisers to get the new platform off the ground later this summer. Previously, Yahoo had hoped to reveal its new service to advertisers as early as April, but disputed contracts prevented a spring launch. Most of the contract issues revolved around content ownership. Many video creators were concerned about losing the rights to their videos once they added them to Yahoo’s channel. There was also some worry over users’ access to offline downloads of some videos. Several producers felt that Yahoo did not have a cohesive business plan either and were confused by the advertising strategy.

Recommended Videos

In the past few months, Yahoo appears to have gone to great lengths to improve its relationships with content creators. To truly combat YouTube, Yahoo needed to make its platform more appealing a creator-friendly. According to those familiar with the company’s plans, Yahoo will offer fixed ad rates and share revenue generously with video producers. YouTube always takes 45 percent of all revenue, which has long been a point of contention with its users. The ad rates will supposedly be 50 to 100 percent higher than those offered by YouTube, so the creators will get more out of the partnership.

Additionally, Yahoo won’t ask for exclusivity from its clients. Those who post to Yahoo’s video-streaming service can also upload videos to YouTube, if they so choose. All video producers will be able to make their own channels and playlists, just like on YouTube. Viewers can embed Yahoo videos and share them on Yahoo platforms such as Tumblr and the home page.

Alongside user-generated content, Yahoo plans to introduce its own full-length TV series on the site. Like Netflix and Hulu before it, Yahoo hopes that its original series will take off and distinguish the service from YouTube and other competitors. It’s a grand ambition and one that Yahoo believes it can realize. It will be interesting to see how it all comes together and if the service an rival YouTube or not.

Malarie Gokey
Former Digital Trends Contributor
As DT's Mobile Editor, Malarie runs the Mobile and Wearables sections, which cover smartphones, tablets, smartwatches, and…
TikTok is about to get banned. Here are 7 TikTok alternatives to use
TikTok logo on an iPhone.

TikTok will be banned in the United States on Sunday, January 19. Many were hoping this wouldn't come to pass, but the ban will go through unless ByteDance sells the social media app to an American-based company. The ban, created on national security grounds, does ahead even after the Supreme Court heard arguments from TikTok creators and ByteDance's legal team. They argued that banning the app was not only a violation of First Amendment rights, but also puts small businesses in jeopardy. Influencers who made TikTok their primary source of income will lose $1.3 billion within the first month of the ban.

There is a glimmer of hope that TikTok will stay active in the U.S., as Senator Ed Markey has introduced the "Extend the TikTok Deadline Act," which will give the platform a stay of execution for 270 days. That's nine more months before it gets banned or divested into another company. However, if the ban does go through, ByteDance will shut down U.S.-based TikTok servers, and users who log into the app will get a message that redirects them to a website about the ban.

Read more
How to download YouTube videos for offline viewing
A smartphone displaying YouTube on its screen as it lays on top of a laptop's keyboard.

YouTube might be a streaming-first video platform, but you can download YouTube videos, too. You can even download them for free with the right software, although simply being a YouTube Premium member is the most straightforward method. Having a YouTube video saved offline makes it easy to view it later, watch it when you're offline and away from a stable Wi-Fi connection, or just watch it multiple times without having to re-stream it.

Whatever reason you have for wanting to download a YouTube video, though, there are a range of ways to do it. Here's how.

Read more
YouTube TV just got even better on iPhones and iPads
Multiview on YouTube TV on an iPad.

If you use the most popular live-streaming service on an iPhone or iPad, things just got even better. YouTube TV — which boasts more than 8 million subscribers — just pushed multiview live on Apple's mobile devices, as previously promised.

It works basically the same way it does on a television. YouTube TV picks the programs available in multiview, and you get them all at once, with audio coming from one of the shows. Tap another, and the audio switches. And just as before, you can get multiview for sports, news, business, or weather. (Though we definitely don't recommend watching four news channels at once in an election year.) It's just in time for March Madness, which is great, though we hope you'll be able to pick your own games instead of just sticking with the multiple viewing options YouTube TV gives. This will be great come fall, though, when the new season of NFL Sunday Ticket takes hold.

Read more