From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux
Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
On Sat, 23 May 2026 09:22:48 -0600, Maria Sophia wrote:
For those who aren't aware, if you've ever seen an advertisement
while streaming any YouTube video, you're doing something wrong
(IMHO). :)
I can recall a past version of youtube-dl having an option to download
the ads. It was marked "experimental" ...
Thanks for that experimental ad-related youtube-dl information, as I don't think I've seen an ad in years on any platform, the PC included, where I
think it's interesting how the youtube ad blocking works given there are
two types of ads, which, for lack of the real names, I'll call them
1. Ads that Google inserts
2. Ads that the creator inserts
In addition, iOS youtube aps insert another type of ad, which I'll call
3. Ads inserted by the youtube replacement app itself (which sucks)
Since I strive to add value in every post, I looked up how the FOSS YouTube replacement apps & extractors avoid streaming the "platform ads", where it turns out, apparently, they simply don't ask for them.
Apparently the way the FOSS YouTube apps work on baked-in ads inserted by
the creators themselves is twofold, where NewPipe makes this task easy:
A. Taptap (moves a set number of seconds forward)
B. Sponsor Block ( <
https://sponsor.ajay.app/> )
The taptap method is self explanatory, and it's what I use mostly, but
mainly because I never looked up (until now) how "Sponsor Block" works.
<
https://github.com/ajayyy/SponsorBlock>
SponsorBlock is apparently a database where users submit timestamps for:
a. Sponsor segments
b. Intros
c. Outros
d. Self-promos
e. "Like & Subscribe!" reminders
f. Non-music sections in music videos
Apparently, NewPipe can automatically skip these if you enable Sponsor
Block, but the videos I watch are so niche that likely it wouldn't matter.
--
On Usenet, kind helpful people learn from others in every single article.
--- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2