YouTube CEO Neal Mohan took over the top job in 2023.
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YouTube was founded by three PayPal employees in 2005.Since launching, it’s become the most popular free video-sharing platform in the world.Take a look at the history of YouTube.
In its 19-year history, YouTube has become the undisputed king of online video.
It has well over 2 billion monthly users who watch hundreds of hundreds of millions of hours of content every single day. But many people don’t know how YouTube got its start.
The company rose like a rocket ship after its founding in 2005, and was bought by Google just 18 months later. Under Google, YouTube went from being a repository of amateur video to a powerhouse of original content, not to mention a launching pad for its own new brand of superstars, like MrBeast and the Smosh Brothers.
Here is how YouTube got its explosive start, and maintained that momentum to become the biggest force in online video.
Reuters/Lucas Jackson; YouTube
They worked out of Hurley’s garage in Menlo Park, California, according to a report from USA Today.
On Valentine’s Day in 2005, Hurley — as CEO — registered the trademark, logo, and domain for YouTube.
The website launched to a small subset of users. However, YouTube-as-a-dating-site attracted little interest, forcing the cofounder to take out ads paying women $20 to upload dating videos. Instead, users started uploading videos of all kinds to YouTube.
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But the story of how the cofounders got to this point is a much-contested one.
Karim has maintained that the cofounders drew inspiration from two significant events in 2004: Janet Jackson’s wardrobe malfunction at the Super Bowl and the devastating tsunami in the Indian Ocean.
However, Chen and Hurley said they thought of the idea of YouTube as a place to upload videos they had taken at a party. Chen said this story was later concocted with the help of an outside PR firm to replace YouTube’s dating origins.
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The video, called “Me at the zoo,” is only 18 seconds long. It shows Karim, one of the cofounders, standing in front of elephants at the San Diego Zoo and talking about their trunks.
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Sequoia partner Roelof Botha worked at PayPal with the cofounders, and learned about YouTube after using it to upload old wedding and honeymoon videos.
By December 2005, YouTube officially launched out of beta, and was made available to the public. At this point, YouTube was getting eight million views a day, according to report from Telegraph.
YouTube
NBC’s complaint paved the way for YouTube’s “Content Verification Program,” which launched in October 2007 to help content creators easily identify videos that infringed on their copyrights and get them removed, The New York Times reported. YouTube and NBC eventually struck a deal to help promote the network’s upcoming fall TV line-up in June 2006.
Later in 2005, a video was uploaded to YouTube showing two boys in China lip-synching to the Backstreet Boys. Susan Wojcicki — YouTube’s former CEO who was in charge of Google’s acquisitions at the time — said the video convinced her it would be worth it for Google to invest in user-generated content by purchasing YouTube.
Later in April, venture capital firms Sequoia Capital and Artis Capital Management invested $8 million in YouTube’s Series B funding round, bringing total investment in the site to around $12 million. When YouTube was acquired months later, these firms’ investments paid out massively, according to a report from the Times.
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The deal netted the cofounders nearly $400 million each in profits. The same day the deal goes through, YouTube moved to its headquarters in San Bruno, California.
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Chad Hurley, YouTube’s CEO at the time, predicted that mobile would be a “huge market,” making YouTube’s mobile site a “natural transition.”
In July, YouTube teamed up with CNN to host a presidential debate during the 2008 election cycle, featuring video questions submitted by the public. Seven out of the 16 presidential candidates in 2008 announced their campaigns via YouTube.
In July, YouTube teamed up with CNN to host a presidential debate during the 2008 election cycle, featuring video questions submitted by the public.
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Instead of an option for traditional pre-video ads, the company chose a new in-video format featuring semi-transparent banners that popped up on the lower portion of videos and could be clicked away after several seconds.
Later that year in December 2007, YouTube rolled out its “Partner Program” to select creators, allowing them to earn money from their content based on ad revenue.
It allowed YouTubers to turn their hobby into a career. Not even a year later, the most successful creators were earning six-figure incomes, The New York Times reported.
In November 2008, YouTube expanded its ad offerings to include sponsored videos and pre-roll ads, a format YouTube long said it wouldn’t resort to because those ads were too intrusive to the audience. However, the benefits paid to brands and advertisers beat out customer experience in the end.
Vevo
As part of the deal, Vevo could distribute its music videos on YouTube, setting the groundwork for Vevo’s massive YouTube presence today.
YouTube
The YouTuber has since surpassed 111 million subscribers, and was the most-subscribed-to solo creator on the platform for several years.
In February 2017, PewDiePie was the subject of a bombshell Wall Street Journal investigation that found nine of his past videos contained “anti-Semitic jokes or Nazi imagery.”
One of those videos showed two men, paid by PewDiePie, holding up a sign reading “Death to All Jews.” Both YouTube and Disney cut ties with him, and he was kicked out of YouTube’s top-tier advertising program.
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In his place, Google appointed Salar Kamangar, who the company said had already been leading YouTube’s daily operations for two years, according to a statement provided to BBC.
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YouTube Live allowed the site to stream all types of content, including concerts, sports games, the royal wedding, and the Olympics.
In May 2011, YouTube soft-launched a rental service, from which consumers could choose thousands of movies and TV shows to rent and stream directly on the platform, according to Digital Commerce 360.
Later that year, it invested $100 million into its first batch of original channels in a push to create original content on the platform, according to a report from All Things D. YouTube partnered with established brands and major celebrities, a move that creators viewed as the platform’s disregard for their value and influence.
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The spaces functioned as recording and creating studios for YouTube content creators.
After the pandemic, the company announced the spaces closed and said it would be shifting to a hybrid model, combining pop-up locations with virtual events.
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After nearly a decade of serving as CEO, Wojcicki stepped down in February 2023.
Wojcicki said she was stepping down to “start a new chapter focused on my family, health, and personal projects I’m passionate about.” She said she would continue to advise the company.
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The platform filtered content in an effort to ensure it was safe for minors and offers parental controls like limiting screen time and disabling search.
Later that year in August, YouTube Gaming debuted as a way for gamers to livestream their play sessions to a live audience, as well as interact and chat with fans in real-time. The service was meant to counter Amazon-owned Twitch, the dominant force in the live-streaming market, which Google reportedly tried (and failed) to buy a year earlier.
In October, YouTube unveiled YouTube Red, a subscription service that lets customers watch videos and stream music without ads. Three years later, YouTube Red was renamed YouTube Premium and spun off its music streaming to a separate service called YouTube Music.
YouTube
YouTube’s ability to police content was put into question, and analysts estimated the boycott cost the company $750 million.
In April 2017, YouTube made the first of two major algorithm changes: It put stricter policies on ads and later revamped its Partner Program to raise the eligibility requirements for money-generating channels.
These changes, along with the advertiser boycott, helped kick off YouTube’s first “Adpocalypse,” a term creators coined for the advertising impact.
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The service didn’t go nationwide for another two years, and the price has since increased to $72.99 per month.
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More advertisers pulled their ads, and YouTube responded by updating its policies around age-restricted content.
In December, YouTuber Logan Paul posted a video of him and friends discovering and filming a dead body in Japan’s so-called “suicide forest.” Outrage over the video was swift. Although he wasn’t banned from YouTube, he was suspended from its top-tier ad revenue program.
Then, in February 2019, YouTuber Matt Watson posted about what he described as a “soft-core pedophilia ring” living in the comments on YouTube videos featuring children. YouTube responded by disabling comments on videos featuring children.
The Federal Trade Commission fined YouTube $170 million in 2019 after investigating whether it violates children’s privacy laws by collecting data of children under the age of 13 without their parents’ consent.
YouTube generated $15 billion in ad revenue in 2019, 9% of parent company Alphabet’s total ad revenue.
Chris Unger
MrBeast started posting videos on YouTube when he was around 13 years old, under the username “MrBeast6000.”
After going viral for posting a video of himself counting to 100,000, he started uploading similar content, like him spinning a fidget spinner for 24 hours. Now he’s known as “YouTube’s biggest philanthropist” for frequently posting charity stunts.
The 26-year-old has 262 million subscribers and brings in about $600 to $700 million annually, although he still doesn’t consider himself wealthy and has said he puts most of his money back into producing more videos.
Under Mohan’s leadership, YouTube partnered with the NFL to exclusively broadcast Sunday Ticket football.
The NFL said shortly after the partnership began that YouTube’s Sunday Ticket package had more subscribers than it did the year prior on DirecTV.
The CEO is also focused on advancing the platform’s AI capabilities and offerings. Mohan said that in 2024, tools like Dream Screen and YouTube Create will encourage more content creation.
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One of the employees said YouTube Music gives users a choice on how to consume podcasts. They can listen to audio-only or watch it in video format — and they can go back and forth between the two if the episode is downloaded with YouTube Premium.
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Initially, it looked like YouTube was going to ice out Apple’s fancy new “spatial computing” headset, the Vision Pro.
A YouTube spokesperson initially told The Verge that access to the site on the headset would be through Safari, and that an app wasn’t currently in the works.
But YouTube revealed shortly after the release that a dedicated app for the headset was “on our roadmap.”
Shriya Bhattacharya
YouTube and TikTok are both battling to get creators to post to their respective platforms. One of the biggest ways they can do that is by payout programs
TikTok’s new creator rewards program was announced in March after months of testing it in a beta program. It incentivizes creators to post longer videos by requiring users to create videos over one minute long to qualify for payments.
The new program also prioritizes search and said it will assign videos a “search value” based on how aligned they are with trending search topics. That search value will help determine a creator’s payout, in addition to other factors like engagement.
The Clueless Agency
The accounts are referred to as digital avatars or AI-generated virtual influencers, and include accounts like Lil Miquela and Magazine Luiza. The AI influencers have been gaining popularity across platforms like YouTube, along with Instagram and TikTok.
According to a report by The Influencer Marketing Factory, YouTube is the top platform for AI influencers, with 59% of participants responding they followed these creators there. TikTok was right behind, with 56%, the study said.