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posted by cmn32480 on Friday August 28 2015, @08:01AM   Printer-friendly
from the and-they-are-annoying-too dept.

UK politicians and have urged Twitter and Facebook to change the default behavior of autoplaying videos following the spread of footage showing the shooting of a WDBJ-TV reporter and cameraman:

MPs have called on Twitter and Facebook to take action after many users were confronted with autoplaying videos of the murder of a US TV news crew. The footage was suspected to have been posted by the murderer on Wednesday. Because the sites have set video to play automatically by default, many people saw the video without choosing to when it was shared into their feeds.

A parliamentary group said the firms should ensure that users are warned about graphic content before it plays. The chair of the cross-party Parliamentary Internet, Communications and Technology Forum (Pictfor) said that both social media sites should automatically sift for such content. "Facebook, Google, Microsoft and others have already worked together with government and regulators to prevent people being exposed to illegal, extremist content, using both automatic and manual techniques to identify footage. Social media, just like traditional media, should consider how shocking other content can be, and make sure consumers are warned appropriately," Matt Warman told the BBC.

The Conservative MP for Boston and Skegness added: "For victims, friends and families it's important to make sure that, in an online world without a watershed, users know what they're about to see and have a reasonable opportunity to stop it." He said that, while users can change their own settings to stop videos auto-playing, Facebook and Twitter "need to be aware that one size does not fit all". He said: "Many people who are ordinarily happy that videos play will have seen shocking footage by accident, without warning of its graphic nature."


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  • (Score: 5, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 28 2015, @09:14AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 28 2015, @09:14AM (#228905)

    > Click to play is the reason I still use Flash to watch Youtube.

    I disable javascript on youtube and don't get autoplay with html5 either.

    But I also use VLC for all my youtube playback because the user-interface is so much more capable - especially for talking head videos which I can play at around 1.5x speed to be less boring.

    Just drag-and-drop the youtube URL into VLC and it automagically works. Or you can use this add-on. [mozilla.org]

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  • (Score: 2) by jdavidb on Friday August 28 2015, @03:21PM

    by jdavidb (5690) on Friday August 28 2015, @03:21PM (#229020) Homepage Journal

    Just drag-and-drop the youtube URL into VLC and it automagically works

    Thank you! I've been using a plugin to download Youtube videos and then play them in VLC for a couple years now. I had no idea how much easier it could be.

    --
    ⓋⒶ☮✝🕊 Secession is the right of all sentient beings
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 29 2015, @02:40AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 29 2015, @02:40AM (#229302)

      Only ones it won't work for are those with DRM. There might also be a problem with age-verification videos - in the past they worked transparently but just last week I had one that wouldn't play in VLC. But I didn't investigate the details at all. Whenever I get a problem video, I just point youtube-dl [github.io] at it - which bypasses all the DRM crap - and play the file from disk. A total no brainer.