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YouTube says over 25% of its creator partners now monetize via Shorts | TechCrunch


With TikTok potentially poised for a U.S. ban, YouTube is touting how well its own TikTok competitor, YouTube Shorts, is paying off for creators. The company on Thursday said its short-form video platform now averages over 70 billion daily views and over 25% of channels in YouTube’s Partner Program monetize their videos through revenue-sharing on Shorts.

The news swiftly follows TikTok’s announcement earlier this month where the ByteDance-owned short video app said that its revamped creator fund had increased total revenue by over 250% in the last six months. TikTok’s year-old fund, which replaced TikTok’s $1 billion Creator Fund, is now exiting beta.

YouTube introduced monetization options for Shorts creators in September 2022, with its plans for expanding the YouTube Partner Program (YPP). Before, YouTubers producing long-form video content had to have 1,000 subscribers and 4,000 watch hours to qualify for revenue-sharing. But starting in early 2023, Shorts creators could meet a new threshold of 1,000 subscribers and 10 million Shorts views over 90 days. These creators would earn 45% of the ad revenue from their short videos.

That program is now one year old, the company says. What’s more, YouTube notes that creators participating in the partner program for Shorts often monetize in other ways, as well. Over 80% of YPP creators generating money through Shorts also earn from long-form advertising, fan funding, YouTube Premium, BrandConnects, Shopping and other means. That indicates that creating for Shorts is not necessarily a standalone endeavor for many, but rather serves as one aspect of creators’ larger businesses.

In total, YouTube says its 16-year-old YPP now includes more than 3 million creators around the world and has paid out $70 billion to creators, artists and media companies in just the last three years. That’s larger than “any other creator monetization platform,” YouTube notes, in a swipe clearly aimed at TikTok.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

LinkedIn is experimenting with a TikTok-like video feed in its app | TechCrunch


LinkedIn is testing a new TikTok-like short-form video feed, the company confirmed to TechCrunch on Wednesday. With this new test, LinkedIn joins numerous other popular apps that have launched their own short-form video feeds following TikTok’s rise in popularity, including Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat and Netflix.

The feed was first spotted by Austin Null, a strategy director at an influencer agency called McKinney. Null posted a short demo on LinkedIn showcasing the new feed, which lives in the app’s navigation bar in a new “Video” tab. Once you tap on the new Video button, you will enter into a vertical feed of short videos that you can swipe through. You can like a video, leave a comment or share it with others. The company didn’t share details about how the feed determines which videos to show users.

The new addition is similar to the vertical short-form video feeds you see in other apps, but while those feeds include a variety of content ranging from comedy to cooking videos, LinkedIn’s feed is obviously focused on careers and professionalism. While you have always been able to post videos on LinkedIn, the new dedicated feed is  designed to boost engagement and discovery on the platform by presenting bite-sized videos that people can quickly scroll through.

Microsoft-owned LinkedIn says videos are becoming one of its users’ desired formats for learning from professionals and experts, which is why it’s testing a new way for users to discover relevant videos. The feature is in early testing, so most people won’t have access to it just yet.

The launch of the new feature comes as many creators have amassed notable followings on TikTok for sharing advice and experiences regarding topics like career growth, job searches and professional development. LinkedIn’s new feed would give creators a new place to share their video content and potentially reach more viewers. It’s possible that LinkedIn may also monetize the feed at some point in the future to entice creators to post their video content on the app.

Although the feature presents new opportunities for creators, some users might not see the new feed as a welcome addition to the app, as they may feel inundated by the many different short-form videos feeds on popular apps.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Former Snap AI chief launches Higgsfield to take on OpenAI's Sora video generator | TechCrunch


OpenAI captivated the tech world a few months back with a generative AI model, Sora, that turns scene descriptions into original videos — no cameras or film crews required. But Sora has so far been tightly gated, and the firm seems to be aiming it toward well-funded creatives like Hollywood directors — not hobbyists or small-time marketers, necessarily.

Alex Mashrabov, the former head of generative AI at Snap, sensed an opportunity. So he launched Higgsfield AI, an AI-powered video creation and editing platform designed for more tailored, personalized applications.

Powered by a custom text-to-video model, Higgsfield’s first app, Diffuse, can generate videos from scratch or take a selfie and generate a clip starring that person.

“Our target audience is creators of all types,” Mashrabov told TechCrunch in an interview, “from regular users who want to create fun content with their friends to social content creators looking to try a new content format to social media marketers who want their brand to stand out.”

Mashrabov came to Snap by way of AI Factory, his previous startup, which Snap acquired in 2020 for $166 million. While at Snap, Mashrabov helped build products like AR effects and filters for Snapchat, including Cameos, as well as Snapchat’s controversial MyAI chabot.

Higgsfield — which Mashrabov co-launched several months ago with Yerzat Dulat, an AI researcher specializing in generative video — offers a curated set of pre-generated clips, a tool to upload reference media (i.e. images and videos) and a prompt editor that lets users describe the characters, actions and scenes they wish to depict. Using Diffuse, users can insert themselves directly into an AI-generated scene, or have their digital likeness mimic things — like dance moves — captured in other videos.

Image Credits: Higgsfield

“Our model supports highly realistic movements and expressions,” Mashrabov said. “We’re pioneering ‘world models’ for consumers, which will allow us to build best-in-class video generation and editing with a great level of control.”

Higgsfield isn’t the only generative video startup going head to head with OpenAI. Runway was one of the first on the scene, and its tools continue to improve. There’s also Haiper, which has the backing of two DeepMind alums and over $13 million in venture cash.

Mashrabov argues that Diffuse will stand out thanks to its mobile-first, social-forward go-to-market strategy.

“By prioritizing iOS and Android apps instead of desktop workflows, we enable creators to create compelling social media content anytime and anywhere,” Mashrabov said. “Indeed, by building on mobile, we’re able to prioritize ease of use and consumer-friendly features from day one.”

Higgsfield is also running lean. Mashrabov says that the generative models underpinning the platform were developed by a 16-person team in less than nine months and trained on a cluster of 32 GPUs (32 GPUs might sound like a lot, but considering OpenAI uses tens of thousands, it’s not really). And Higgsfield has only raised $8 million to date, the bulk of which came from a recent seed funding tranche led by Menlo Ventures.

Image Credits: Higgsfield

To stay one step ahead of rivals, Higgsfield plans to put the seed cash toward building an improved video editor that’ll let users modify characters and objects in videos, and toward training more powerful video generation models specifically for social media use cases. In fact, Mashrabov sees social media — and social media marketing — as Higgsfield’s principle money-making niche.

While Diffuse is currently free to use, Mashrabov envisions a future where marketers pay some sort of fee or subscription for premium features, or for volume or large-scale campaigns.

“We believe Higgsfield unlocks an incredible level of realism and content production use cases for social media marketers,” he said. “We constantly hear from CMOs and creative directors that they need to optimize content production budgets and shorten timelines while still delivering impactful content. So we believe video generative AI solutions will be a core solution in helping them to achieve it.”

Of course, Higgsfield isn’t immune from the broader challenges facing generative AI startups.

It’s well-established that generative AI models like the kind powering Diffuse can “regurgitate” training data. Why’s that problematic? Well, if the models were trained on copyrighted content without permission or some sort of licensing agreement in place, those models’ users could unwittingly generate a copyright-infringing work — exposing them to lawsuits.

Image Credits: Higgsfield

Mashrabov wouldn’t reveal the source of Higgsfield’s training data (other than to say it comes from “multiple publicly available” places), and also wouldn’t say whether Higgsfield would retain user data to train future models, which might not sit right with some business customers. He did note that Diffuse users can request that their data be deleted at any time through the app.

Digital “cloning” platforms like Higgsfield are also ripe for abuse, as the wildfire spread of deepfakes on social media in recent months has shown.

In a similar vein, Higgsfield could make it easier to steal creators’ content. For instance, one need only upload a video of someone’s choreography to generate a video of themselves performing that same choreography.

I asked Mashrabov about what safeguards or protections Higgsfield might be using to attempt to prevent abuse, and — while he wouldn’t go into specifics — he claimed that the platform employs a mix of automated and manual moderation.

“We’ve decided to gradually roll out the product and test in select markets first, so that we can monitor where there’s the potential for abuse and evolve the product as necessary,” Mashrabov added.

We’ll have to wait and see how well that works in practice.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

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