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YouTube
Organisation

YouTube

Google-owned video platform; the world's largest video-sharing site, 2 billion monthly users.

Last refreshed: 3 June 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics

Key Question

As premium live video migrates off YouTube, what does the platform still control?

Timeline for YouTube

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Common Questions
Who owns YouTube?
YouTube has been owned by Google (now Alphabet Inc.) since 2006, when Google acquired it for $1.65 billion.Source: Wikipedia
How is YouTube involved in live sports broadcasting?
YouTube serves as both a highlights and live-adjacent distribution channel for sports rights holders. DAZN used TikTok (not YouTube) for its April 2026 Serie A free-stream, and the FIFA World Cup 2026 rights sit with Fox, NBCUniversal, and DAZN — YouTube holds no primary tournament rights.Source: media-ai-pivot coverage
How much money does YouTube make each year?
YouTube's advertising revenue exceeded $35 billion in 2025, making it one of the world's most profitable digital advertising properties.Source: Alphabet annual report 2025
What AI tools has YouTube introduced for content creators?
YouTube has introduced AI-assisted tools including automatic dubbing into multiple languages, AI-generated background replacement, and AI-summarisation features for long-form videos. The platform also uses AI extensively for content recommendation and moderation.
Why did Netflix pull The Breakfast Club off YouTube?
Netflix launched The Breakfast Club with iHeartMedia as its first daily live show in June 2026, moving it into an ad-free 6am weekday slot on Netflix and away from YouTube — part of a broader premium live-video migration from open platforms to proprietary streaming destinations.Source: Update 433 briefing

Background

YouTube is the world's largest video-sharing and streaming platform, owned by Google (Alphabet Inc.) since 2006 for $1.65 billion. It hosts over 800 million videos and serves more than 2 billion logged-in users per month, making it the second-most visited website globally. YouTube operates simultaneously as a user-generated content platform and a professional media distribution channel; it competes with traditional broadcasters while also distributing for them. Its advertising revenue exceeded $35 billion in 2025. YouTube TV, a live television streaming service, has approximately 8 million subscribers in the United States. YouTube uses AI extensively for recommendation, moderation, and advertising targeting, and has introduced AI-assisted creation tools for creators including automatic dubbing and background generation.

In the media-AI-pivot story, YouTube's role is as a live and on-demand distribution platform that both facilitates and is displaced by new rights and distribution strategies. DAZN and TikTok used YouTube infrastructure as the structural analogue for their free-to-air Serie A experiment on 30 April 2026, demonstrating how sports rights holders test audience acquisition outside paywall environments. Adobe's Firefly AI Assistant launch inside Premiere Pro positioned YouTube-targeted content creation as part of the NLE-native AI workflow shift.

By Update 4, Netflix pulled The Breakfast Club with iHeartMedia off YouTube into an ad-free 6am weekday live slot on Netflix, the clearest signal yet that premium live video is migrating off YouTube's monetisation model and onto proprietary platforms. YouTube's own AI content-labelling posture under the EU AI Act also came into focus as Spotify's DDEX adoption in May 2026 set the metadata standard YouTube and other platforms will face pressure to match.

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