产品展示
  • 瓦尔塔70D26L汽车电瓶蓄电池适配丰田凯美瑞汉兰达86奔腾B50 蓝标
  • 冲钻骆驼2s电瓶12V面包车6-QW-45AH46B24lLR汽车蓄电池
  • 专柜热卖东风天龙大力神天锦汽车货车驾驶室座椅弹簧海绵坐垫总成
  • 小车电瓶充电器拖拉机汽车AGM蓄电池全自动保护12V24V快速充电机
  • 五征原厂配件 奥驰2000 1800 国三 座椅 副驾驶 座椅 靠背 坐垫
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车电瓶

TikTok announces 10

2024-05-21 05:03:56      点击:693

After teasing their interestin longer-form videos last week, TikTok confirmed today(Feb. 28) that it will allow users to upload videos up to 10 minutes long. That's a major bump up from both the three-minute maximum previously available to users and the five-minutevideos the platform had been beta testing.

Sentiment in the Mashable newsroom Slack is "why?" and "who asked for this?" — and the general consensus is that even a three-minute video is already too long. There's a kind of infectious rhythm to flipping through TikTok that is thrown off by longer form content. As Deputy Entertainment Editor Kristy Puchko put it, "I get (arguably) irrationally angry when I get hit with a 3-min TikTok." Based on a quick search for related tweets, Twitter users seemto agree.

If TikTok was built on addictive, snappy, and snackable videos, why does it need to compete in long form content, too? The answer, as always, is money. As Wiredreported last week, "TikTok has ridden the wave of popularity [but] to sustainably grow its revenue, it needs longer videos, which gain more attention, and allow them to sell more ads."

Mashable Top StoriesStay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletterBy signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

YouTube has prioritized "watch time"as a metric since 2012, claiming it would phase out the prevalence of clickbaity thumbnails and reward "videos that actually kept viewers engaged." That might be true, but the change also multiplied the amount of available ad real estate, and may have led to higher rates of burnout amongst creatorstrying to keep up with producing more content.

But there is still a huge difference in how the two platforms pay creators for their content. YouTube's industry-leading revenue split is far more equitable than TikTok's current monetization program and highly publicized but finite Creator Fund, which endemic video creator Hank Green recently opined was "dramatically under-paying creators." Other star creators, like MrBeast, agreed.

As of now, it doesn't look like longer-form content will be monetized any differently than the bite-sized videos that make up the majority of the platform.

South Korea to push forward US
The 9 best tweets of the week