YouTube vs. uTube – $1,000 Per Day Name Similarity
Written by Pablo Palatnik on May 17, 2007
It comes down to monetizing on opportunity. If you want to talk money, uTube came out on top leveraging the largest video distribution brand, YouTube. The buzz online is that uTube is currently generating about $1,000 per day through their implemented ringtone search engine, which means $360,000 per year! The websites traffic rose from about 1,500 visitors to 2 million visits per month reports Muhammad Saleem over at ProNet.
YouTube is not losing any sleep over this news on uTube, but both are still in litigation with a lawsuit involving the brand & loss of business on Utube’s part. Why complain? The brand still maintains it’s image to it’s core clients (online) and manages to cash in on a name similarity. If anyone is losing, it’s YouTube. The loss comes from YouTube’s end on two main reasons:
1-Loss of Traffic- Two million lost visitors per month must be very troubling news to YouTube. It is said that the estimation of two million visitors has risen. While uTube makes $1k + per day on ringtones, YouTube’s loss of revenue from two million visits can far exceed the $1k per day mark.
2-Brand Reputation & Management- Believe it or not, not everyone has seen what YouTube looks like and I would like to see its unique visits per month. When going to uTube thinking you’re going to YouTube must be very disappointing for a new user seeing what the buzz is all about for the first time. YouTube, the largest online video distribution site, worth billions, must protect at all cost its brand.
Definition of Trademark by US Government Agency:
•A trademark is a word, phrase, symbol or design, or a combination of words, phrases, symbols or designs, that identifies and distinguishes the source of the goods of one party from those of others.
•A service mark is the same as a trademark, except that it identifies and distinguishes the source of a service rather than a product. Throughout this booklet, the terms “trademark” and “mark” refer to both trademarks and service marks.
File Trademark Date For YouTube: January 30, 2006
File Trademark Date For uTube: October 18, 2006
I’m no lawyer, but if a brand is registered and trademarked before the other one causing consumer confusion, it is automatically at fault. YouTube has not yet trademarked its logo (or atleast theres no public record of it yet), as you see no TM on it, only on thier motto, “Broadcast Yourself.” That must be the reason YouPorn has the same logo…no trademark issues. Someone needs better brand reputation & management?
Posted in: Industry News
Yahoo’s Change in Mentality, Identity, & Focus…â€To Connect Peopleâ€
Written by Pablo Palatnik on May 17, 2007
Loren Baker had a great post today in the Search Engine Journal titled,“Yahoo & Google’s
Mission Statement: Do They Connect?†Yahoo’s Vice President, Jeff Weiner, announced today Yahoo’s new mission statement:

“To connect people…â€
If I had to focus on one word that best sums up what we are trying to accomplish in our mission, it’s “connect.â€When we talk about connecting people we are specifically talking about connecting our consumers to their most essential needs, connecting our advertisers and publishers to their most valuable consumers, and connecting the dots internally to create far greater efficiencies and fully leverage the company’s strengths. Speaking of connecting dots internally, our recent product announcements regarding closing Yahoo! Photos and Yahoo! Auctions in the U.S. and Canada represent a clear indication that we have begun to do so in earnest. And it’s not just about rationalizing existing product lines — it’s also about better leveraging and integrating the powerful assets we’ve got (e.g. Flickr integration into Yahoo! Search).
“…to their passions…â€
While “passions†may initially strike you as one of those feel good, corporate-speak words, it’s important to understand that there is a lot of science that goes into truly making connecting people to their passions a reality. If we are going to be successful at this endeavor, it means we’ll not only need to understand the intentions of our users, but also leverage the fundamental technologies to make this possible. Fortunately, we have spent the last few years building what is arguably the most relevant search engine on the Web (seriously…and before you say it, when was the last time you compared?) and have most recently leveraged our core competency in matching technologies into our new and vastly improved search engine marketing system, a.k.a. “Panama.â€
The key going forward will be to continue to expand these technologies to virtually every pixel we can improve on the Yahoo! Network. In other words, we want to connect the right user to the right content at the right time. If we get this right, the implications are considerable. Consider that the one-size-fits-all content featured on most web sites clicks at only a fraction of the top algorithmic results in web search. Why? Because we know exactly what you are looking for when you do a query. However, for the most part we can only do our best to anticipate what you want when you are browsing your favorite property. The goal is to close that gap, and ultimately make your content browsing experience as fundamentally relevant as your web search experience. This is a lofty ambition, and probably more vision than mission, but it’s a worthy one, and one of the highest priorities for the Network team today.
“…their communities…â€
In a day and age where discussion on the Web inevitably turns to the rising influence of community and social media, connecting people to their communities may on the surface appear to be the most straightforward component of our mission statement. For the most part, we all intuitively understand the power of community and how the communities we participate in, online and offline, create value in our day-to-day lives.
While communities have and will always continue to play a central role in creating value on the Yahoo! Network (e.g. Groups, Flickr, Answers, Bix — and stay tuned for the next gen of products in this area), when we talk about connecting people to their communities, strategically we are talking about creating better user experiences not simply by knowing what you want, but also by leveraging who you know. This dynamic has traditionally manifested itself when you use products like the Yahoo! Mail address book or Yahoo! Messenger contact list. However, with our rapidly expanding number of properties facilitating connections between people in various contextual environments, an entirely new world of possibilities is introduced. In addition to developing some exciting new community products to help make this happen, we’re also building out our research ranks to include some of the most renowned social scientists in the world to help us further develop these capabilities.
“…and the world’s knowledge.â€
When people first hear the word “knowledge†in the context of Yahoo!, they may immediately think Yahoo! Search or Yahoo! Answers. However, consider that virtually everything we do on the Network results in finding, using, sharing or expanding information or knowledge in some way or another. Communication applications like Yahoo! Mail and Yahoo! Messenger facilitate the ability for people to connect and exchange knowledge. As described above, our community assets do the same. Our news & information properties such as News, Finance, and Sports are all about the exchange of information and knowledge, and our entertainment assets like Movies, TV, Music, and Games also facilitate the exchange of knowledge around those activities (i.e. the best shows to watch or music to listen to).
Our goal is to tie these underlying stores of knowledge together wherever and whenever it might be useful for you. In other words, we want to leverage our assets to build the most relevant, comprehensive, dynamic, and open repository of knowledge and content on the Web. One of the things we’re most excited about is the concept of “open,†and all of the potential we have yet to tap by opening up some of the most trafficked pages on Yahoo.com to the highest quality publishers on the Web, regardless of their size. (Though bear in mind, the more scalable your infrastructure, the better. Our front page reaches over 40 million unique users per day — that’s a whole lot of attention to be channeling to your servers. Stay tuned for more on this soon…)
So there it is: our corporate mission as a strategic framework for the Network Division. It’s a mission and strategy that not only governs our big picture in terms of where we want to go, but also our day-to-day in terms of how we’re going to get there. As I’m sure you’d agree, at the end of the day, any strategy, no matter how good it sounds in theory, is only as valuable as its ability to be executed. With the re-org now behind us, and a clear sense of where we want to go in place, our attention is now very much focused on connecting the dots, creating value for our customers, and making this strategy a reality.â€
It was inevitable that Yahoo takes this new direction where Google’s mission is, “To organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and usefulâ€
The only way Yahoo can compete with the world’s largest search engine was to change it’s focus and identity, which it needed to differentiate themselves from what has become the biggest powerhouse online, GOOGLE. It’s not to say Yahoo’s focus and main source of revenue is Search, but needed to put search in a different prospective for its users and for its identity. Delicious, Flickr, & Yahoo Answers are all part of what is shaping up to be an entity with an identity.
Posted in: Industry News
Future Of Online Video- A Mark Cuban Point Of View
Written by Pablo Palatnik on May 16, 2007
If theres one guy I admire, It’s Mark Cuban. Owner of the Dallas Mavericks, Co-Founder of HDNet. In 1995 Cuban founded Audionet, which boradcasted live games and events over the internet. Yahoo! aquired Cuban’s company giving him $5.04 BILLION in stock. Cuban was also an investor in Weblogs Inc., which was aquired by AOL.
To me, this guy is one of those people that can not only see the future, but helps build it. His vision is one many in Business pay attention to because he’s got a good proven track record. His reputation proceeds him as a “bad-boy” as owner of his NBA team, the Dallas Mavericks. When it comes down to business, Cuban is one in a million.
Cuban spoke at the Congressional Future Of Video Hearing. Thought everyone should give it a listen…see what you think.
Cuban gets a little technical with the argument on current bandwidth situations. He also talks about the evolvement of the internet becoming web 2.0 mentioing Myspace, Facebook, Digg, etc, “not technological breakthroughs, advanced programming”. He finishes, “reality is, technology improves where theres great opportunity, …where its happening is in aquisition devices for digital video.”
Posted in: Video


