In a February 2 notification sent to relevant customers, the cloud giant says it is updating its Service Terms to specify it does not have "defense or payment obligations for third-party patent claims against you related to use of these services for audio/video encoding, decoding, or transcoding." The services in question are AWS Elemental MediaLive, AWS Elemental MediaConvert, Amazon Interactive Video Service, Chime SDK, Amazon GameLift Streams, and Amazon Kinesis Video Services.
Having announced that over a million channels used YouTube's AI creation tools daily in December, the platform recently launched Ingredients to Video in Shorts and the YouTube Create app. YouTube Ingredients breaks down what's helping a video perform well-things like format, topics, and creative elements viewers respond to. It's designed to give creators practical guidance on what to keep, tweak, or test next so they can make videos that are more likely to get views and engagement.
YouTube is expanding its test of variable channel subscriber notification frequency, which reduces the amount of push notifications that are sent to subscribers if they don't regularly engage with a channel's content. YouTube originally launched its variable notifications as a test last March, with the aim of reducing overwhelm, which can often lead to people switching off push notifications entirely. And that experiment has obviously gone well, because now, YouTube is expanding it to more subscribers.