--- title: 'Why' weight: 4 summary: Why did I create Piped? --- ## Why did I create Piped? YouTube has an extremely invasive privacy policy which relies on using user data in unethical ways. Here are some things about YouTube: - Tracking via third-party cookies for other purposes without your consent. - YouTube can delete your content if you violate the terms - Reduction of legal period for cause of action - YouTube may use your personal information for marketing purposes - YouTube can view your browser history - YouTube can use your content for all their existing and future services - YouTube gathers information about you through third parties - YouTube can license user content to third parties - YouTube provider makes no warranty regarding uninterrupted, timely, secure or error-free service - Deleted videos are not really deleted - Your data may be processed and stored anywhere in the world - YouTube is only available to users over a certain age - YouTube can suspend your account for several reasons - YouTube has non-exclusive use of your content - The court of law governing the terms is in the US - YouTube collects your IP address for location use Source: https://tosdr.org/en/service/274 A lot of inspiration came from NewPipe and Invidious. I created Piped to fix issues in NewPipe and Invidious which are architectural issues and cannot be fixed easily. ### NewPipe - Your IP is exposed to YouTube. - Feeds are slow to load. ### Invidious - Uses way too much resources. - Total bandwidth limited by the peak capacity of the load balancer. - Coded in Crystal, a language that is relatively hard for beginners. - Caching is done at a backend level. - Invidious was a learning project. - Invidious crashes all the time. - Various hacks are required to keep an instance running at a reasonable stablity. However, there are some drawbacks of Piped: - JavaScript is required - Browsers without Service-Workers support will feel significantly slower. Eg: Tor Browser