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Like, Comment, Subscribe

Inside YouTube's Chaotic Rise to World Domination

Audiobook
4 of 5 copies available
4 of 5 copies available
The gripping inside story of YouTube, the company that upended media, culture, industry, and democracy—by a leading tech journalist
Across the world, people watch more than a billion hours of video on YouTube every day. Every minute, more than five hundred additional hours of footage are uploaded to the site, a technical feat unmatched in the history of computing. YouTube invented the attention economy we all live in today, forever changing how people are entertained, informed, and paid online. Everyone knows YouTube. And yet virtually no one knows how it works.
Like, Comment, Subscribe is the first book to reveal the riveting, behind-the-scenes account of YouTube’s technology and business, detailing how it helped Google, its parent company, achieve unimaginable power, a narrative told through the people who run YouTube and the famous stars born on its stage. It’s the story of a revolution in media and an industry run amok, how a devotion to a simple idea—let everyone broadcast online and make money doing so—unleashed an outrage and addiction machine that spun out of the company’s control and forever changed the world.
Mark Bergen, a top technology reporter at Bloomberg, might know Google better than any other reporter in Silicon Valley, having broken numerous stories about its successes and scandals. As compelling as the very platform it investigates, Like, Comment, Subscribe is a thrilling, character-driven story of technological and creative ingenuity and the hubris that undermined it.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 9, 2022
      Despite its cultural ubiquity, most people know nothing about what goes on at YouTube, writes Bloomberg technology reporter Bergen in his intriguing debut. He charts the company’s history, starting with its founding in 2005 by graphic designer Chad Hurley and his programmer friends Jawed Karim and Steve Chen, at a moment when entertainment was shifting from broadcast TV to reality show and eventually MySpace. In its scrappy startup days, YouTube struggled to rein in pornography, violence, and illegal content, and its content moderators were often left in horror at what they’d seen. But the fact that contributors could make astonishing incomes in ad revenue kept the mainstream videos flowing in, with product unboxing videos garnering millions of views and kid stars getting rich. Bergen also suggests YouTube’s 2006 acquisition by Google shielded it from some of the bad press Facebook and Twitter got for allowing misinformation to be shared on their platforms, and takes note of the legal issues, political challenges, and conspiracy theorists that the company still has to reckon with. And the idiosyncratic service has ended up as a microcosm of its own, he writes: “In a little over a decade, YouTube had evolved... into one of the most dominant, influential, and successful media businesses on the planet.” Those curious about how YouTube got to be the behemoth it is should pick this up.

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  • English

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