this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2024
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Well if you don't know how to operate a car, you should not drive. If you don't know the basics, you won't be able to do small repairs yourself. If you don't know nothing about cars at all, you will likely have to paid more than someone with more knowledge to obtain the same result. Ask any cab if he just pays and doesn't know anything about cars.
If you're a video creator who wants to make money with your videos, you should be knowledgeable about monetisation and video making. Don't be lazy, it's just your job.
True, but you don't have to understand how an engine works in order to drive a car. Same goes for content creators. They don't have to understand how monetisation works to get started on youtube. It just happens.
Yeah, I disagree. Adding that barrier is exactly the attitude greybeard linux users have and why linux has the bad image it has. It shouldn't be necessary to be knowledgeable about everything in order to do something. Having a lower barrier for entry encourages use.
Anti Commercial-AI license
I would say that the comparison hit a wall here. It seems that there is nothing between pushing a button to get money and learning how peertube is coded and is working internally for you... To be fair to YouTube creators, pushing a button isn't enough to make you money in most cases.
There is 2 things here: 1_ you want to make and host video. 2_ you want to make videos and make money with it.
In case 1 you don't care about money, so there is no problem. In case 2 you want money, to me if you want money you should know how to make money with the tools you have (or use other tools if needed). I agree that with Peertube it's harder to move from case 1 to case 2 easily as it is with YouTube. But the main focus of YouTube in the last years is not sharing content but making money. As I was saying Peertube is a video host software not a tool to make money with videos. It isn't build with this goal set as the primary one.