|
I was expecting to find out how much data YouTube has, but that number wasn't present. I've used the stats to roughly calculate that the average video is 500 seconds long. Then using a bitrate of 400 KB/s and 13 billion videos, that gives us 2.7 exabytes. I got 400KB/s from some FHD 24-30 fps videos I downloaded, but this is very approximate. YouTube will encode sections containing less perceptible information with less bitrate, and of course, videos come in all kinds of different resolutions and frame rates, with the distribution changing over the history of the site. If we assume every video is 4K with a bitrate of 1.5MB/s, that's 10 exabytes. This estimate is low for the amount of storage YouTube needs, since it would store popular videos in multiple datacenters, in both VP9 and AV1. It's possible YouTube compresses unpopular videos or transcodes them on-demand from some other format, which would make this estimate high, but I doubt it. |
400KB/s, or 3.2Mbps as we would commonly use in video encoding, is quite low for original quality upload in FHD or commonly known as 1080p. The 4K video number is just about right for average original upload.
You then have to take into account YouTube at least compress those into 2 video codec, H.264 and VP9. Each codec to have all the resolution from 320P to 1080P or higher depending on the original upload quality. With many popular additional and 4K video also encoded in AV1 as well. Some even comes in HEVC for 360 surround video. Yes you read that right. H.265 HEVC on YouTube.
And all of that doesn't even include replication or redundancy.
I would not be surprised if the total easily exceed 100EB. Which is 100 (2020 ) Dropbox in size.