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Baby Praises Jesus.... or Elmo

Fire fart catastrophe!

Things some random guy hates

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'guy, i hate things, i hate when, listen bitch, fight claps' to 'guy, i hate things, i hate when, listen bitch, fight claps, college humor' - edited by Boise_Lib

Is It Hot In Here?

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'insane, extreme, volcano, lava, molten hot magma' to 'insane, extreme, volcano, lava, molten hot magma, college humor' - edited by Boise_Lib

Awkward and Complicated Wedding Toast

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'drink, toast, glasses, arms, knot, spatial problem, wedding, fail' to 'drink, toast, glasses, arms, knot, spatial problem, wedding, fail, college humor' - edited by Boise_Lib

Grease Dilemma

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'grease, travolta, dance, tell me more, tell me more' to 'grease, travolta, dance, tell me more, tell me more, college humor' - edited by Boise_Lib

It's Time ... (Sift Talk Post)

Stingray says...

@dag

In case it hasn't already been mentioned, I was thinking of these items recently:

1. Identify the video source. So that we know when things are posted via YouTube, Break, Vimeo and so on. I found it to be very helpful most recently with all these College Humor vids going dead and they had the little blurb added to all of them about being a sift partner. I was thinking that a small icon showing the video provider would be nice.

2. Allow videos to be tagged by a GPS location (lon/lat, address) using Google Maps or something. Why would this be helpful? For videos tagged, there can be a map view with the videos shown in context of the world. This way I could see all videos narrowed down to the eastern seaboard in comedy or news or something.

3. Along the same lines as #2, allow a video to be date and time stamped of when it occurred. These fields don't have to be required, but if this is a news event, it would be nice to input a date range and have a filter... (for example, 9/11).

Peach and Zelda Catch Up

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'mario, link, nintendo, sketch, gannondorf, bowser, shyguy' to 'mario, link, nintendo, sketch, gannondorf, bowser, shyguy, college humor' - edited by Boise_Lib

Pocahontastoned

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'colors of the wind, pocahontas, stoned, baked, cannabis, marijuana' to 'colors of the wind, pocahontas, stoned, baked, cannabis, marijuana, college humor' - edited by Boise_Lib

If Movies Had Internet

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'sixth sense, the ring, the apartment, star wars, basic instinct, chtv' to 'sixth sense, the ring, the apartment, star wars, basic instinct, chtv, college humor' - edited by Boise_Lib

Pug Loves Batman

Dr. Evil Baby Laugh

Elmo Overdoses on E

oritteropo (Member Profile)

jonny (Member Profile)

lucky760 says...

The gist of it is the hosts we currently allow provide iframes so they can serve videos without Flash because they use HTML5 instead (except if the user's browser is incapable of using anything but Flash).

Traditionally (meaning before HTML5 became accepted enough to be a widespread alternative to Flash), hosts that required you to use an iframe were just using Flash or sometimes even JavaScript. The fact is some (or maybe most) such hosts are still using those old methods.

The bottom line is regardless of host, *any* arbitrary code could be inserted into an iframe, including ads or malicious code. It wouldn't need to be something executed by the host directly; some hackers could infiltrate their system and silently inject bad code into their iframes. This would compromise any visitor who sees such an iframe in their browser everywhere on the Web.

It's not much at all an issue of liability I'm concerned about. I just don't want to play any part in helping people get screwed by baddies.

In reply to this comment by jonny:
I don't really know of any hosts in particular, other than NPR I guess, that I'd want supported. Is the host required to have a Flash embed for it to work at all? I thought that for the few hosts you mentioned below were supported "Flash free".

I don't know the details of the security issues with iframes, but it seems that at worst VideoSift itself would be a conduit (or host) for malicious code - your own servers wouldn't be liable to attack from any embed, would they? In any case, it has to be something malicious used as an embed (knowingly or not), so at the very least, you probably want to limit iframe submission to, I don't know, silver stars and up?

In reply to this comment by lucky760:
The reason we've been so willing to accept the iframe hosts we accept now is they can readily be converted between iframe and Flash embeds given just a video ID.

We can consider accepting more iframes, maybe as part of VideoSift 5. Maybe make your recommendations there for new iframe hosts we should accept.

I, personally, am always hesitant to add iframes because they open a gateway onto videosift through which demons and goblins may spew forth.

In reply to this comment by jonny:
Is there any chance of supporting more iframe hosts in the (near) future? I heard a great story about Igudesman & Joo tonight on NPR, and found a great video of them at the NPR studios performing, but it was iframe only (akaik).

In reply to this comment by lucky760:
There are more hosts than just YouTube that you can watch without Flash. In addition to YouTube and Vimeo, we support College Humor, Funny or Die, and Daily Motion.






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