Spotify is looking to land more video creators. Its head of content partnerships shared how the platform is taking on podcast rivals.
In April 2005, the first YouTube video was uploaded to the brand new website and it is still the oldest video on the platform.
A train driver has raised more than £55,000 for charity by offering a front row seat to rail journeys through his YouTube channel. Don Coffey, from Chapel-en-le-Frith in Derbyshire, started sharing videos in 2017 to "showcase the beauty of train travel" and now has more than 51,000 subscribers.
Google on Wednesday won an injunction from London's High Court to prevent the enforcement of Russian judgments against the U.S. tech giant over the closure of various Google and YouTube accounts. Judge Andrew Henshaw granted Google a permanent anti-enforcement injunction,
Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube are getting ready to welcome TikTok users, as the Supreme Court upheld a law that effectively bans the Chinese-owned app from the United States.
It’s impossible to deny that Crunchyroll has had a big hand in introducing anime to countless new anime fans in both North America and around the world. Announced last year, the streaming service confirmed that it was teaming up with YouTube to bring even more of its series to the platform.
Some Google One subscribers will soon get a discount on YouTube Premium in the US. YouTube is starting to test a handful of new
Old-school YouTube icon James Rolfe, better known as the Angry Video Game Nerd, has announced his own 8-bit NES game is in the works.
Music quality is getting a boost on YouTube, although it is subscribers to its YouTube Premium tier who will benefit.
Last year, the YouTube app unveiled a new feature called “Jump Ahead”, which, as the name suggests, lets you skip to the best part of the video, with the platform using machine learning in combination with user feedback to determine the timestamps. Now, the Jump Ahead feature is available on the web.
Meta's Facebook, Elon Musk's X, Google's YouTube and other tech companies have agreed to do more to tackle online hate speech under an updated code of conduct that will now be integrated into EU tech rules,