The term is quite over used in my opinion, it is very often used in hyperbole. Whether it is in terms of popularity and driving traffic to a website or a threat said to break the Internet, it doesn’t seem to live up to the meaning of the term.

  • invertedspear@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    Did no one before that look at the schema and question the use of a signed int for a counter? That’s just bad design.

      • otp@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        It was a fairly reasonable guess back when they designed it, especially since you need an account to like a video.

        That would mean close to 1/3 (~33%) of the world’s population "like"d the video.

        Nowadays it’s only about 1/4 of the world’s population (25% for those who don’t get fractions).

        It’d take massive amounts of bots to like a video that many times, and what would be the point?

        Of course, they probably never imagined they’d scale quite this much.

    • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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      10 months ago

      I mean, yeah, it is a bad design but you have to remember that YouTube wasn’t always a Google owned service, this sounds exactly like the kind of thing that gets overlooked in a hobby project because no video ever will have more than 2 billion views, right?

      So yeah, bad design but really easy to forget about for a video view counter.

    • mesamune@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      The guy who made that code is probably loooong gone to another job. And it worked before.