Making Money On YouTube Videos Now Requires 10,000 Views


It has been five years since the YouTube Partner Program was opened up to everyone. This allowed anyone and everyone to just sign up for the service, upload videos, and start making money off of them. Obviously, the videos had to meet certain guidelines to ensure that they were advertiser-friendly, but that hasn’t stopped people from taking unfair advantage of the program. That’s why making money on YouTube videos now requires 10,000 views.

Some YouTube users have taken unfair advantage of this by creating accounts on which they upload content owned by other people, be it movie studios or record labels. They spoil the fun for everyone and YouTube is now going to make it harder for them to make money off of this.

YouTube creators will not be able to turn on monetization – the feature that lets them make money on their YouTube videos – until they have reached 10,000 lifetime views on their channel.

It feels that this limit gives it ample time to gather enough information on a channel to know for sure whether it’s posting original content or stealing it from somewhere else.

“In a few weeks, we’ll also be adding a review process for new creators who apply to be in the YouTube Partner Program. After a creator hits 10k lifetime views on their channel, we’ll review their activity against our policies,” writes Ariel Bardin, the VP of product management at YouTube.

It’s also going to add a review process for new creators who apply to be in the YouTube Partner Program, it’s only after they hit 10,000 lifetime views on the channel will their activity be reviewed against the program’s policies.

Making Money On YouTube Videos Now Requires 10,000 Views , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Showtime Apps Get Offline Viewing Support


If you’re a Showtime subscriber and you regularly use its mobile applications to consume content on the go then you’re going to like the update that it has sent out today. Showtime apps for iOS and Android now have support for offline viewing, meaning that you can download content from its streaming catalog to watch even when there’s no internet connection.

I’m sure many can argue that the apps should have had this feature earlier given that in this day and age, even with internet connectivity never too far out of reach at least in developed countries, one still feels the need to have content on the device that doesn’t require an internet connection to play.

Showtime and Showtime Anytime apps for iOS and Android now have this feature. They will allow subscribers to download episodes of popular shows like Dexter, Homeland, and Shameless for offline viewing.

Users will now see a download button which will let them save movies and TV shows in both standard and high definition. Showtime doesn’t appear to be limiting the feature in any other way so the only thing users may have to be considerate about would be the amount of free storage on their device.

Showtime Apps Get Offline Viewing Support , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Western Digital My Passport SSD is maker’s fastest portable drive

Western Digital has taken the wraps off what it says is its fastest portable drive ever, the My Passport SSD. This presents a new category of external drives for Western Digital customers, one that features a solid state drive rather than a hard drive. The company says this model is palm-sized with rapid speeds and a durable body for safe, … Continue reading

Six things to know about Xbox Project Scorpio

Earlier today, Microsoft revealed the tech behind its next console, codenamed Project Scorpio. The reveal came in the form of a lengthy profile from Eurogamer’s Digital Foundry, and there’s a lot of information to dig through. You should absolutely read through the whole thing if you have the time, but if you don’t, here are six key takeaways from today’s … Continue reading

Gorsuch, Like Thomas, Will Get His Big Payback

Even worse than the GOP’s ramming Neil Gorsuch on the high court, is what Gorsuch is now poised potentially to do on the SCOTUS. He can comfortably over the coming years do exactly what his Constitutional Originalist Siamese Twin Clarence Thomas vowed that he would do and has been as good as his word. That’s take revenge in his dissents, opinions, writings and most importantly, rulings on the most crucial cases of the era against his opponents.

The pattern with Gorsuch is almost identical as it was with Thomas, sans Anita Hill. He was reviled, lambasted and picked at by liberal and moderate Democrats and every liberal and progressive political advocacy group in the country. His appellate court rulings, dissents and writings were ripped apart. He suffered the ultimate indignity of having his nomination delayed as long as possible, and then filibustered, by virtually every Senate Democrat.

Even Thomas didn’t suffer this indignity. He was hotly opposed by a sizeable number of Democrats, but there was no filibuster. In fact, you’d have to go back more than a half century to cite the only other time a Presidential pick to the high court has been filibustered. That was Lyndon Johnson’s nomination of Abe Fortas to SCOTUS in 1965. His nomination was subsequently pulled.

Thomas warned early just what he would do on the high court. When asked how long he’d stay on the court, he reportedly said that he’d stay there for the next 43 years of his life. He was 43 at the time he made that prediction. In a more revealing aside, he supposedly quipped to friends that it would take him that long to get even. Whether that was hyperbole or an apocryphal tale, it didn’t take him 43 years to wreak his revenge.

He’s done everything humanly and legally possible to get his revenge for being picked at. The death penalty, voting rights, gay rights, women’s rights, school prayer, campaign financial reform, corporate financial abuses, in fact, any issue that even remotely touches on any protective rights for minorities, labor, women and gays, you can mail Thomas’s to the letter vote or dissent against it in. Thomas has been so hardline and predictable on these issues that he’s often been the only judge to say no to a case such as death penalty racial disparity redress.

His decisions make sense because they have less to do with his warped interpretation of law than with his publicly expressed warped and frozen view of the Constitution, and his private vow to get revenge.

Gorsuch isn’t likely to be as obvious in his vow to wreak revenge on his detractors or make any outrageous public statement as his other judicial hero, Antonin Scalia, would do from time to time about a legal or public policy issue facing the court. That’s not his style. He will do his judicial dirty work quietly, scholarly and always with an impeccable tone of judicial and public civility. However, the result will be the same on every case that lands before the court  ― from voting rights to protecting corporate interests.

Unlike Thomas, who had the scantest judicial track record before he was confirmed, Gorsuch’s anti-labor, pro-business blind eye toward discrimination rulings, dissents, opinions and writings were well-honed and well-documented. In the overwhelming majority of 14 cases involving discrimination, he shot down all union and employee litigant arguments charging discrimination in back pay, hiring and termination cases.

Gorsuch could even be more dangerous than Thomas in two ways. He’s a thoughtful jurist who is careful in how he frames his opinions on cases. And unlike Thomas, he’ll do what Scalia occasionally did, and that’s stray from the strict constructionist Constitutional read, and side with the court’s moderates and liberals on a decision. This will bolster his legal cachet just enough to mark him as a judge who’s not a rigid ideologue. However, when the big-ticket cases such as an almost certain challenge to what’s left of the Voting Rights Act that ultra-conservatives want undone, his vote will be just as predictable as Thomas’s.

There’s more. If he plays his court cards right, he could take-over the role that Scalia had. That’s was prodding, pushing, and hectoring other court justices to see, if not agree, with his view of how a case should be decided.

Gorsuch’s role of the court enforcer could be even more impactful without another Trump pick to the court which as he has promised would again be in the mold of Thomas and Scalia. It will insure that the narrow five to four majority that conservatives have had in the past with Scalia to decide cases their way will remain firmly intact.

Thomas hasn’t given a hoot about the insults, derision and abuse that’s been heaped on him for

his nutty dissents. It’s just been his continuing payback. Now Gorsuch in his way will have his turn.

 

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of the forthcoming ebook How the Democrats Can Win in The Trump Era (Amazon Kindle). He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on Radio One. He is the host of the weekly Hutchinson Report on KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles and the Pacifica Network.

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Get Ready To Swoon Over The 'Anne Of Green Gables' Netflix Trailer

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Anne of Green Gables fans are truly blessed: In addition to the beloved CBC miniseries adaptation of the beloved book, about an impulsive young dreamer, it’s also getting the new prestige treatment.

“Anne,” spelled with an “e,” is coming to Netflix on May 12, and a new trailer gives us just a taste of what we’re in for.

We can glimpse iconic scenes ― most importantly, Anne thwacking her girlhood rival and eventual lover, Gilbert Blythe, over the head with her slate in the middle of school ― and sequences of Anne’s imaginative raptures.

It seems that Anne is ostracized at school, save for her loving friend Diana, and her outcast status even separates her from Gilbert in a Romeo and Juliet-style drama. Here’s L.M. Montgomery’s actual description of Anne’s first day of school:

There are a lot of nice girls in school and we had scrumptious fun playing at dinnertime. […] Ruby Gillis gave me an apple and Sophia Sloane lent me a lovely pink card with “May I see you home?” on it. I’m to give it back to her tomorrow. And Tillie Boulter let me wear her bead ring all the afternoon.

The actress portraying Anne, Amybeth McNulty, brings the perfect mixture of coltish enthusiasm and dreamy romanticism to the scenes shown in the trailer. The aesthetic and slight tweaks to the book material in the trailer hints at the tone the series will take ― moody and gray-washed as opposed to the book’s scrubbed and sprightly atmosphere. There’s even the de rigueur prestige adaptation shot of the heroine standing, tousled and windswept, on a cliff overlooking the sea. 

The Netflix series looks to be using Montgomery’s clean, optimistic story as material for a darker, more melodramatic retelling. Anne Shirley, who never met a fictional princess she wouldn’t want to have tragically die on the last page, would definitely have approved.

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Bureau Of Land Management Changes Website Photo To Big Hunk Of Coal

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Close your eyes and picture “public lands” in the United States. What image comes to mind? Majestic mountain views? Pristine forests?

How about a big ol’ lump of coal?

That last one is apparently the image that the folks over at the U.S. Bureau of Land Management want to project, based on a change made to their website sometime in the past 24 hours.

According to records from the Wayback Machine — an online archive that caches screenshots of websites at particular moments in time — on April 5, the site instead featured a large banner showing two backpack-wearing boys gazing out over a scenic rolling hills.

But by Wednesday, the long expanse of coal had taken its place.

Hovering over the image reveals a caption that identifies the picture as a
“large coal seam at the Peabody North Antelope Rochelle Mine in Wyoming.” A coal seam is a bed of coal, typically referring to one that can be mined.

The Bureau of Land Management, an agency within the interior department, is responsible for managing public lands across the United States. Those public lands, primarily in western states and Alaska, make up one-eighth of the landmass of the country and include wilderness areas, national conservation areas, national monuments and numerous trails and rivers. Coal mining, as well as drilling for oil and gas, occurs on some BLM-managed public lands.

BLM spokeswoman Kristen Lenhardt told HuffPost in an email that the photo was one of many that will appear on the site going forward. On Friday, a new photo will appear, representing recreation on public lands.

“As part of the BLM’s transition to a new website design, we will be regularly rotating the banner with photos that reflect the many uses our public lands have to offer,” she said.

Paul R. Ross, U.S. Department of the Interior spokesman, expressed support for the swap from the DOI.

“We applaud their creativity in getting their message out,” Ross said in an email. “[The Interior secretary] has made it clear that he will manage our public lands in accordance with President Teddy Roosevelt’s mixed use philosophy, where development of our natural resources is done in a way that balances conservation and public access.” He added that BLM lands account for about 40 percent of coal production in the U.S. 

Last month, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke signed an order to overturn a 2016 moratorium on new coal leases on federal land. He also ordered a review of the agency’s climate change policies in order to “better balance conservation strategies policies with the equally legitimate need of creating jobs for hardworking American families.”

Those moves by Zinke immediately followed President Donald Trump’s executive order to roll back Barack Obama’s climate change policies. Trump called for a “re-evaluation” of a rule on power plant emissions and declared the beginning of an “energy revolution” prioritizing coal.

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Alaska Lawmakers Shut Down Colleague Who Opposed A Bill Honoring Black WWII Soldiers

WASHINGTON ― When a Republican lawmaker in Alaska opposed a bill commemorating black soldiers who helped build the Alaska Highway during World War II, his colleagues from both sides of the aisle called out his views for being misguided.

State Rep. David Eastman (R) represents Wasilla, the town that once claimed failed vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin as its mayor. Eastman, a freshman lawmaker who previously served in Afghanistan, gave an impassioned speech on Wednesday to fight against a bill establishing Oct. 25 as a day to officially honor African-American soldiers who worked on the road stretching more than 1,000 miles from British Columbia to Alaska. 

The Army assigned thousands of soldiers to construct the highway during World War II, with the aim of connecting the continental U.S. to Alaska. The state was considered a potential Japanese target at the time. The Army was still segregated, and black soldiers were typically relegated to non-combat duties at the beginning of the war. The black soldiers working on the road construction project faced open racism and weren’t given the same resources as white soldiers to forge through the harsh terrain.

Katrina Beverly Gill, the daughter of one of the black soldiers who built the highway, testified that her father “had to endure the treacherous weather while living in substandard conditions such as living in tents with ice approximately one inch thick on the inside while white soldiers lived in buildings.”

Still, black soldiers surpassed the government’s expectations. Historians have pointed to the project as one of the events that facilitated the military’s subsequent desegregation, according to The New York Times. The U.S. government has referred to the highway as “the road to civil rights.”

But Eastman said a bill honoring those accomplishments didn’t honor everyone who contributed to the highway. 

“Let us recognize those veterans for their service, not the color of their skin,” he said, later adding that “we don’t recognize African-American Firefighter Day, and I don’t think we should.”

State Sen. David Wilson (R), who is also from Wasilla, introduced the bill, which passed the Alaska Senate unanimously last month. It passed 39-1 in the House on Wednesday, with Eastman the only lawmaker to vote against it. Prior to casting their ballots, a number of lawmakers took time to explain why they thought Eastman was wrong.

“I don’t have a rousing speech prepared,” said state Rep. Delena Johnson (R-Palmer). “I think we should recognize mistakes we made in the past, and to ignore them would be a mistake.”

The bill acknowledges that “the government made that racial division,” she added, noting that “these people that the government already separated out did a fabulous job.”

I think we should recognize mistakes we made in the past, and to ignore them would be a mistake.
State Rep. Delena Johnson (R)

House Majority Leader Chris Tuck, a Democrat, pointed out that black soldiers had to use hand tools and sleep in tents when it was colder than 20 degrees below zero. The bill is “recognizing people who have not had the same recognition,” he said.

The history has “been almost skipped over,” added Rep. Geran Tarr (D-Anchorage), who noted that the official 759-page U.S. Army history of the Corps of Engineers only recognizes African-American troop involvement in a one-sentence footnote.

In response to questions from The Huffington Post, Eastman pointed to a Facebook post he wrote defending his vote. “There is nothing right about elevating one group of Americans at the expense of another,” it reads. 

But his colleagues aren’t buying it.

“I, too, was not inclined to speak on this bill,” said state Rep. Matt Claman (D-Anchorage). “I remember my father and my two uncles who both served in WWII, and they served in segregated units, they would want us to vote yes.”

Republican state Rep. Gabrielle Ledoux added, “this is part of our history.”

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Jesse Jackson Likens Latinos Building Border Wall To Black People Building Slave Ships

The Rev. Jesse Jackson had a powerful analogy Wednesday on the topic of Latinos who might aid in the construction of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.

Jackson spoke with UNICEF’s Claudia González Romo during the annual Hispanicize conference, which brings together Latino media and marketing influencers, in Miami. During their fireside conversation, the reverend and civil rights activist commented on how the Latino community should fight back against the Trump administration. 

While discussing the need for solidarity among Latinos and communities of color, according NBC, Jackson likened the idea of Latinos helping build President Donald Trump’s planned border wall to “blacks building slave ships.”

He specifically criticized the dozens of Latino-owned firms that submitted proposals to the Department of Homeland Security to build the first stage of the wall.

“If they were going to build slave ships to take blacks back to Africa, I hope blacks would not try to get the contracts to build the slave ships,” Jackson said, according to USA Today. 

It’s almost inevitable that some Latinos will participate in the construction of the expanded border barrier. Latinos make up a large majority of the workforce in many counties along the U.S.-Mexico border. Pablo Aguirre, the communications director of the El Paso Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, told The Huffington Post in January that his organization would urge the federal government to contract with local businesses. Some 80 percent of El Paso’s population is Hispanic. 

In an interview with the Miami Herald, Jackson said the wall “symbolizes something very ugly” and is meant to “demean.” When Latinos help, he said, “that’s choosing dollars over dignity.”

Jackson, who also denounced the Trump administration’s deportations, asked Latinos to come together to fight for their shared values. He pointed out that the size of the Latino population in the United States means very little without a sense of unity.

“That’s potential. Unless it’s organized it’s not actual power,” Jackson said, according to NBC. 

The activist also urged all communities of color to come together to fight for shared causes, noting that “sometimes suffering is the common cord” that connects the communities. 

“When we close ranks on common interests, we win,” he said. “When we don’t, we lose.”

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Yara Shahidi Says 'Black-ish' Helped Her Embrace Being Mixed Race

Sign up here for The Tea to read exclusive celebrity interviews with stars like Jacob Sartorius, Maddie Ziegler, and Willow Shields!

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Black-ish” star Yara Shahidi sat down for an interview with Build Series on Wednesday and shared how being on the ABC show taught her about her own blackness. 

“Being on a project like ‘Black-ish’ finally gave me a term to describe myself,” she explained.

As an individual of African-American and Iranian descent who is “proud of both sides,” Shahidi felt the term “black-ish” perfectly encompassed her mixed identity. “So many times, if you are of any race, there is a certain feeling of this meter of like, ‘How black am I? How Iranian am I?’” Shahidi said.

“It’s hard, when you’re both, to feel as though you can coexist as both and be fully both,” she said.

In addition to her acclaimed performance on “Black-ish,” the actress has earned high praise from co-star Tracee Ellis Ross — and a college recommendation letter from Michelle Obama.

Check out the full interview below!

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”Black-ish” airs Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m. ET on ABC.

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