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by bluefirebrand 1185 days ago
Maybe I missed it, but Wordpress seemed to handle creators really well.

I've been saying for a while that the next big thing in streaming is Wordpress but for Streamers.

Something relatively easy for small streamers to set up and manage on their own, cheap enough to start small and scale up as it starts to make money, with the ability to handle large-scale streams if necessary.

I don't know how you would handle provisioning the servers and such. Maybe it's not easy enough to automate. But I think this sort of thing would take a huge bite out of centralized streaming sites.

3 comments

> Something relatively easy for small streamers to set up and manage on their own, cheap enough to start small and scale up as it starts to make money, with the ability to handle large-scale streams if necessary.

Self-hosted social networks and microblogs are all over the place and have been for decades, and Twitter is falling apart, but the audience is still on Twitter. Self-hosting streams has never been easier, but even if it were one-click it invariably costs money out of pocket for the bandwidth to self-host a stream, and Twitch does not. WordPress is trivial to host for nearly nothing; streaming, not so much.

The appeal of Twitch isn't livestreaming, it's the culture and existing social network of users and streamers who are already there, and the ease of starting up. The architecture or centralization of the next big thing in the space won't matter, it's whether both the creators, audience, and money will all show up at roughly the same time.

> I've been saying for a while that the next big thing in streaming is Wordpress but for Streamers.

One of the really interesting projects I've been tracking for a while is Destiny.gg (D.gg for short): https://github.com/destinygg

Destiny is a streamer, a very controversial one, that often finds himself on the wrong side of rules, and due to his stances, rarely sees clemency from administrators and moderators. Despite this, he has managed to be a professional streamer for over a decade.

Crucial to his ability to survive the bans and de-platforming is that early on he hired someone to build his own pseudo-platform. The big things were: a page that embedded a stream (e.g. Twitch or Youtube), a chat service, a subscription tied into that chat service, and a web site to tie it all together.

This meant that while Twitch could ban him, he would just move over to Youtube and his core community - which chatted on D.gg, not Twitch - would barely notice. Subscribers would be unaffected and his income would be safe.

The elegant details are that the project synchronizes subscriber tiers from the other chats into the main Destiny.gg chat, so even if you subscribed on Twitch or Youtube, you were not only rewarded in D.gg chat, but incentivized to go there because that's where the core community posts.

Socially, it's been interesting to watch because it ended up with two chat-based communities around this streamer and they actually dislike each other. The chat on Youtube leans one way, but the chat on the D.gg leans the opposite way. It's unlike anything I've seen in other streamers.

Live version of the core functionality: https://www.destiny.gg/bigscreen

The whole thing is available for licensing, although no longer publicly maintained. I'm not entirely sure where things are between the developer and Destiny, but it's such an interesting project and I'm surprised it isn't the de-facto standard for most streamers.

Could you give an example of someone who was making significant money (preferably by YT/Twitch standards but any example is good) on WordPress?
This is a red herring.

I don't think WordPress pays anyone anything.

They built a platform and the will also provide hosting. You can download WordPress from wordpress.org and just run it. Or you can go to wordpress.com and buy a whole hosting plan where wordpress.com manages the software for you.

But WordPress doesn't give fuck number one about what you do with it. So you are free to monetize it in any fashion you want. They'll even help you with that. WordPress doesn't have to worry about if any of the people on their site are making money because they still get paid.

Twitch and YouTube are free for creators. You don't have to pay to stream on Twitch or to post videos to YouTube. All the cost of hosting and serving is borne by the service. Which is why they were doing ads in the first place. But with creators now needing actual production, they realized they were pouring in serious money into their channels, but getting none of that sweet ad money.

So shit got complicated. It's free to post and free to watch. But that doesn't make it free to host or produce. Which is why you have YouTube showing you ads and the video itself being sponsored by AG1, Dollar Shave Club, and Mystery Box of the Month Club.

I think ultimately, these places are going to need to charge for hosting. And yes, that's going to kill a lot of channels. But ok. You can afford overpriced, under-engineered rainbow glowy keyboards, you can instead put that towards a $30/month hosting fee.

It's anything but. Video is more engaging than text. Video hosting is expensive. No one's making tens of thousands a month from their blog (or by convincing people to buy merch based on their blog).
Wordpress is more than blogs. You can run a whole ass site off of the Wordpress platform. You don't even need to have a blog.

But the point is still, Wordpress charges people. YouTube and Twitch do not.

They have a weird broadcast television model going. But broadcast television curates their content and charges advertisers decent rates not dependent on "engagement".

I'm not saying video hosting isn't expensive. I'm saying that YouTube and Twitch should be charging for it. If that makes it infeasible for some people to stream. I'm ok with that outcome.

A sizable portion of the entire internet is running WordPress. That’s billions of dollars a year.
They're running the Software, but they're not on wordpress.com.

If we're talking about Software, then wow, Microsoft is really treating those game streamers well, because they can use it to play games which they stream.

Not really a good comparison. WordPress is comparable because it comes with the same/slightly different tools for building a business. It’s on the same shelf in the grocery store, so to speak.
I don't think so. YT/Twitch provide the platform and the audience, that's comparable to wordpress.com (in a way; it doesn't really provide the audience).

I don't know of any creators that are leveraging wordpress.com.

Using the software is like using Windows (or Linux, if you want a comparison in open source), but I don't think anyone argues that Linux takes good care of creators in the way they expect it from Twitch or Youtube, primarily because Linux doesn't pay creators, it's not a middle-man, it's a tool. Like wordpress.