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The question itself already describes my interest, but what I’m really wanting to know is how youtube stores the information saying that we’ve already watched that video. I thought about storage with cookies, but it would be impractical since whenever someone cleaned the history cookies could be deleted and so I wouldn’t know which video you already watched or not. Soon after I thought that Youtube stores this information in a comic book, however I think that would create a huge amount of data that can be considered practically useless. Is there then some third way to store this information?
I would like to take this opportunity to ask another question on the same subject. Youtube Pro doesn’t just click on the link to consider that user-watched video. Would you know then how he performs this Team to establish which video is watched or not? I thought of a kind of chronometer with about 80% of the real time of the video, where the video will only be considered as watched if the user stays that X seconds or minutes on the page of the 80% of the clicked video. But I think there must be some other way to perform such a function, I would like to know if there is some other way and if yes, what would be?
For those who have never seen what I’m talking about, just log on to Youtube to watch a video and right after the video appears with a film on top of it semi-transparent with the following saying "Watched".
"practically useless"? Google basically lives on it!
– bfavaretto
When you watch a movie, does Youtube have to send the movie? It just needs to know how much it sent from each one to you. Plus, working with a huge amount of data is exactly what Google does best. Every click you give on websites like Youtube and Facebook is tracked in some way and turned into statistics that ultimately serve marketers to sell more.
– utluiz
@bfavaretto did not speak in the pejorative feeling when I expressed myself when saying "practically useless", it was only a form of expression. So the answer to my question is that this data is stored in BD?
– ivan veloso
The information must be saved in the DB, or you can export it to a file at the end of a period, but for the author of the video it must be constant. I don’t think it’s cool for you to determine that for the video to be 'watched' it should have to run 80%. In the same way as news statistics read, no matter if you read 1 line or 10 paragraphs, loading content computes an access
– Papa Charlie
I believe it’s in the comic book. I didn’t think your "practically useless" was derogatory, just naive, since big companies make money from the data they store about their users. @utluiz explained better what is behind my comment.
– bfavaretto
What matters to Corp. is the trail to draw a profile and maximize sales according to your 'interest'. That’s why what you watch is important'
– Papa Charlie
Whatever form this particular information is stored in, it is not permanent and still has a very short lifespan. The first time I "discovered" this feature, I found it very useful because as not all videos appear on the page of a particular channel, we do not always remember which video we stopped watching. That’s when I saw, after a few days, that the "Assisted" appointments were gone and I went looking for thumbnail which I had stopped at.
– Bruno Augusto
Why the hell is that question labeled
php
andjquery
?!– augustomen