Facebook Pixel How YouTube Ate IV | Fast Company - business - Les denne historien på Magzter.com

Prøve GULL - Gratis

How YouTube Ate IV

Fast Company

|

Fall 2025

AN ORAL HISTORY OF THE VIDEO PLATFORM THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING

- HARRY MCCRACKEN

How YouTube Ate IV

IN YOUTUBE'S EARLY DAYS, THE ODDS SEEMED GOOD THAT THE PLATFORM would be destroyed—not by a competitor, but by its own popularity.

How could any young video startup ever cover the cost of streaming so much content across the internet? Or avoid the fate of Napster, another media-sharing startup of the era that was sued out of business for rampant copyright infringement? Even being acquired by Google in 2006 posed a risk: YouTube could have been mismanaged into irrelevance, as often happens after tech giants acquire shiny new toys.

But over its first 20 years, YouTube didn't just survive—it revolutionized media, redefining what TV could be. By letting anyone upload video for free, it empowered a new generation of creators to cater to every imaginable audience—and attract fan bases in the millions. It taught marketers to appreciate the value of reaching these viewers, and it used technology to give rights holders control over their content. The platform conquered PCs and then smartphones and was eventually available on nearly every new TV set.

Today, with 2 billion logged-in users a month, YouTube is watched more than any traditional TV outlet. According to Nielsen, the company has grown its total viewers by nearly 50% since December 2023, bounding past Paramount, NBCUniversal, and Disney to take the top spot among media companies. It's now the U.S.'s most-watched video provider, not just among streamers but cable and broadcast TV channels, too. Its 2024 ad revenue was $36.15 billion, a figure that doesn't include subscription revenue from its YouTube Premium and YouTube TV businesses.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Fast Company

Fast Company

Fast Company

TOMORROW.IO: FOR PREDICTING HYPERLOCAL WEATHER BEFORE IT'S A PROBLEM

MANY PARTS OF the world that are most vulnerable to extreme weather events, such as hurricanes and flash flooding, are also the ones that legacy weather-forecasting systems overlook.

time to read

2 mins

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

ABRIDGE: FOR RELIEVING DOCTORS OF CHART-WORK DRUDGERY

ABRIDGE HAS CHANGED THE way thousands of doctors practice medicine.

time to read

1 min

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

TBPN: FOR CREATING SILICON VALLEY'S GO-TO TECH NEWS NETWORK

PRODUCERS AT CNBC WAKE UP IN the morning and look at the public markets in order to plan the day's lineup.

time to read

3 mins

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

CADENCE OTC: FOR MAKING EMERGENCY FAMILY PLANNING CONVENIENT

IN 2024, CADENCE OTC LAUNCHED a low-priced morning-after pill and placed it somewhere no one else had: convenience stores, where people need it the most.

time to read

1 mins

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

DOORDASH: FOR DELIVERING A CUTE LAST-MILE ROBOT NAMED DOT AND REWARDS FOR DINING OUT

DOORDASH DElivers millions of orders every day, and its newest couriers are ready to roll.

time to read

1 mins

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

SUBLIME SECURITY, CYERA, CHAINGUARD, HORIZON3.AI - FOR TRANSFORMING CYBERSECURITY'S BIGGEST PROBLEM INTO ITS MOST PROMISING SOLUTION

IT'S NEVER BEEN A BETTER TIME TO BE A HACKER. A STAGGERING NUMBER OF ORGANIZATIONS ARE such easy digital targets that the costs of all the scams, malware, ransomware, and nation-state attacks could top $10 trillion worldwide in 2026—and then there's incalculable political and reputational fallout that comes from high-profile hacks.

time to read

5 mins

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

TUBI: FOR REIMAGINING FREE, FAN-FOCUSED TV

IT'S ONE OF THE TRICKIEST QUESTIONS FOR ANY LEADER, ESPECIALLY IN TIMES OF TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE: WHEN TO FOLLOW THE HERD AND WHEN TO GO IT ALONE.

time to read

8 mins

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

REDDIT: FOR REMAINING AUTHENTICALLY HUMAN IN THE AGE OF AI

LAST FALL, CHIVES TOOK OVER REDDIT. IT STARTED WHEN A COOK WHO BELONGED TO THE MASSIVE SOCIAL SITE'S R/KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL COMMUNITY PLEDGED TO PRACTICE his chive-cutting skills every day and post photos so that others could rate his technique.

time to read

10 mins

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

THE ONION: FOR PROVING THAT PRINT ISN'T DEAD - ESPECIALLY IF IT'S FUNNY

TODAY, THE GRIM MANTRA THAT “print is dead” seems all but a given.

time to read

1 min

Spring 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

ROW 7: FOR INVENTING ENTIRELY NEW VEGETABLES AND RESHAPING THE FOOD SYSTEM IN THE PROCESS

ONE NIGHT IN JANUARY, CHEF DAN BARBER AND HIS TEAM ARE GATHERED IN THE KITCHEN, PLATING COURSE AFTER COURSE OF VEGETABLES.

time to read

6 mins

Spring 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size