YouTube takes on TikTok with longer Shorts, templates, trends, and more



YouTube on Thursday announced a series of updates for its short-form video product, YouTube Shorts. These include the ability for creators to upload videos up to three minutes in length. The company says it’s also updating the Shorts player, introducing templates, and adding a new Shorts trends page on mobile devices.

Combined, the series of updates will help YouTube better compete with TikTok, which already allows for longer videos (10 minutes when recording, or 60 minutes when uploaded), and makes participating in trends easy for its users.

YouTube says the new Shorts player is designed to streamline the look of these short videos, making the creator’s content stand out by placing it front and center in the user interface. It does this by turning the interaction buttons (like, comment, share, etc.) on the right side of the screen into outlined icons instead of those filled with white, allowing viewers to see more of the video that would have otherwise been hidden.

Image Credits:YouTube
Image Credits:YouTube

In addition, the creator’s name, description, and sound information have been more compressed to take up less space at the bottom of the screen. Unfortunately, the latter change means the video description is truncated, requiring users to click the “more” button to read the full text.

Meanwhile, the addition of templates will allow creators and other YouTube users to more quickly jump on trends. This is an area where TikTok today excels with CapCut, which is designed to work with the short video app. From any TikTok video created with a CapCut template, users can hop directly into CapCut’s app to participate in the trend by modifying the template with their own content.

Now YouTube is doing something similar, but without a separate app.

Instead, Shorts users will be able to tap a “Remix” option on a Short, then select “Use this template” to make their own video. In a few months, YouTube says that users will also be able to tap into its content directly from the Shorts camera, which will make it even easier to remix clips from their favorite videos or music videos, or pull multiple clips from across YouTube.

Image Credits:YouTube

Related to trends, Shorts on mobile will introduce a new page for keeping up with the latest, allowing users to discover the popular trends in their own country for inspiration. This differentiates YouTube from TikTok, which focuses more on having users discover trends simply by browsing their For You feed, or by tapping on search. However, TikTok removed its popular Discover page, which had previously showcased what was hot on the app at the moment. Instead of Discover, TikTok rolled out a Friends tab, hoping to make the app more of a social network.

Still, TikTok’s global nature allows users to pick up on trends from other countries, making them their own, in addition to finding inspiration from videos popular worldwide. The most example is baby hippo, Moo Deng, which was a large enough sensation to become the subject of a skit on SNL.

YouTube says it will “soon” allow users to preview what people are saying in the comments directly from the Shorts feed — a change that could encourage more interaction with videos, but also one that could prompt creators to publish “rage bait” — videos designed to get a reaction — in the hopes of increasing engagement.

A final change will allow users to customize how much they want to see Shorts in their own feeds. This is available via a new option, “Show fewer Shorts,” accessed from the three-dot menu in the upper right of the Shorts grid in the Home feed. However, YouTube says this will only “temporarily” show users fewer Shorts. The company did not define how long a pause that would be, though.

Image Credits:YouTube

A previously announced update will allow creators to use Google DeepMind’s video-generating AI model, Veo, for YouTube Shorts. This update, now expected for later this year, will allow creators to change their video backgrounds or publish standalone video clips, YouTube noted.





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