Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan053
I hate to admit it, but the reason that YouTube is an all but dead source of quality content anymore, is because of the thousands of us "lurkers" who find a video they like, and then leave some creepy ass comment to a perfectly unsuspecting girl.
Morale of the story is; STOP INTERACTING, just observe and appreciate. a "Thumbs up" like is okay. A pee related, personal question in the comments section is not okay. Know the difference, and quit ruining it for the rest of us.
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/facepalm
You realize, we aren't idiots right? Most of us don't interact, especially if we've enjoyed this sort of thing for longer than just a few weeks or months--we've learned this lesson.
What you see, is 'imitations' of lurkers (lurkers by definition don't interact, they lurk) and SJWs petending to be interested in the content, or worse, the handful of hypocrites who are interested but interact because their guilt is doing the talking--either way the goal of these comments is almost certainly
they want the content to get pulled down; otherwise known as white knights.
On a secondary note, when YT removes a video they list the reason. If the reason is 'violated rules blah blah blah' then guess what?
It wasn't removed by the poster. It was flagged by the community.... or the algorithms of the modern coding era which exist so the community doesn't have to do it themselves.
If it was removed by the OP it says 'is no longer available' (likely deleted, could be privacy change or unlisted)
If it was altered to private it says 'is listed as private'
If it was removed completely it typically says 'was removed by the user'
I don't mean to seem argumentative, I am trying to share what I've learned through years of experimenting and experience. I grew up with the internet, I'm old enough to not be gullible to face value communication and young enough not to be too stubborn; I see how interactions on it have evolved and often notice these things just because I'm rather detail oriented / observant of this type of stuff, reading between the lines etc of communication I witness or take part in. I'm also an omega geek who studied programming fundamentals post high school and got a deeper understanding of the way machines talk to each other.
Moving on to the reason we are all here:
https://fboom.me/file/info/e2fb1b276bdb6.html