YouTube showing a billion hours of online video daily
YouTube on Monday said that a billion hours of video is being watched on daily basis at the Google-owned online viewing venue in "big milestone" for the service.
"Let's put that in perspective," YouTube's Vice President of engineering Cristos Goodrow said in an online post announcing the achievement. "If you were to sit and watch a billion hours of YouTube, it would take you over 100,000 years."
Online video consumption has been soaring, with Google, Facebook, Twitter and other internet firms working to increase audiences along with their cuts of advertising dollars typically devoted to television.
YouTube, early in February, began letting popular online video personalities broadcast on the go using mobile devices, ramping up a challenge to Facebook and Twitter in the live-streaming arena.Google-owned YouTube has supported live streaming of video through computers for about six years, even broadcasting the U.S. presidential debates online.
Leading social network Facebook and one-to-many messaging service Twitter have already added such capabilities to their mobile applications.
Google parent Alphabet in January reported that its profit in the final three months of last year climbed on growth in mobile search and video-sharing service YouTube.
"Let's put that in perspective," YouTube's Vice President of engineering Cristos Goodrow said in an online post announcing the achievement. "If you were to sit and watch a billion hours of YouTube, it would take you over 100,000 years."
Online video consumption has been soaring, with Google, Facebook, Twitter and other internet firms working to increase audiences along with their cuts of advertising dollars typically devoted to television.
YouTube, early in February, began letting popular online video personalities broadcast on the go using mobile devices, ramping up a challenge to Facebook and Twitter in the live-streaming arena.Google-owned YouTube has supported live streaming of video through computers for about six years, even broadcasting the U.S. presidential debates online.
Leading social network Facebook and one-to-many messaging service Twitter have already added such capabilities to their mobile applications.
Google parent Alphabet in January reported that its profit in the final three months of last year climbed on growth in mobile search and video-sharing service YouTube.