Agreed that the quality of audience is definitely higher for my (niche) AI Safety content on Youtube, and I’d expect Q to be higher for (longform) Youtube than Tiktok.
In particular, I estimate Q(The Inside View Youtube) = 2.7, instead of 0.2, with (Qa, Qf, Qm) = (6, 0.45, 1), though I acknowledge that Qm is (by definition) the most subjective.
To make this easier to read & reply to, I’ll post my analysis for Q(The Inside View Tiktok) in another comment, which I’ll link to when it’s up. EDIT: link for TikTok analysis here.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Qa = 6
In light of @Drew Spartz’s comment (saying one way to quantify the quality of audience would be to look at the CPM [1]), I’ve compiled my CPM Youtube data and my average Playback-based CPM is $14.8, which according to this website[2]would put my CPM above the 97.5 percentile in the UK, and close to the 97.5 percentile in the US.
Now, this is more anecdotal evidence than data-based, but I’ve met quite a few people over the years (from programs like MATS, or working at AI Safety orgs) who’ve told me they discovered AI Safety from my Inside View podcast. And I expect the SB-1047 documentary to have attracted a niche audience interested in AI regulation.
Given the above, I think it would make sense to have the Qa(Youtube) be between 6 (same as other technical podcasts) and 12 (Robert Miles). For the sake of giving a concrete number, I’ll say 6 to be on par with other podcasts like FLI and CR.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Qf = 0.45
In the paragraph below I’ll say Qf_M for the Qf that Marcus assigns to other creators.
For the fidelity of message, I think it’s a bit of a mixed bag here. As I said previously, I expect the podcasts that Nathan would be willing to crosspost to be on par with his channel’s quality, so in that sense I’d say the fidelity of message for these technical episodes (Owain Evans, Evan Hubinger) to be on par with CR (Qf_M = 0.5). Some of my non-technicalinterviews are probably closer to discussions we could find on Doom Debates (Qf_M = 0.4), though there are less of them. My SB-1047 documentary is probably similar in fidelity of message to AI in context (Qf_M = 0.5), and this fictional scenario is very similar to Drew’s content (Qf_M = 0.5). I’ve also posted video explainers that range from low effort (Qf around 0.4?) to very high effort (Qf around 0.5?).
Given all of the above, I’d say the Qf for the entire channel is probably around 0.45.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Qm = 1
As you say, for the alignment of message, this is probably the most subjective. I think by definition the content I post is the message that aligns the most with my values (at least for my Youtube content) so I’d say 1 here.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Q = 2.7
Multiplying these numbers I get Q = 2.7. Doing a sanity check, this seems about the same as Cognitive Revolution, which doesn’t seem crazy given we’ve interviewed similar people & the cross-post arguments I’ve said before.
(Obviously if I was to modify all of these Qa, Qf, Qm numbers for all channels I’d probably end up with different quality comparisons).
I haven’t done extended research here and expect I’d probably get different results looking at different websites. This one was the first one I found on google so not cherry-picked.
Agreed that the quality of audience is definitely higher for my (niche) AI Safety content on Youtube, and I’d expect Q to be higher for (longform) Youtube than Tiktok.
In particular, I estimate Q(The Inside View Youtube) = 2.7, instead of 0.2, with (Qa, Qf, Qm) = (6, 0.45, 1), though I acknowledge that Qm is (by definition) the most subjective.
To make this easier to read & reply to, I’ll post my analysis for Q(The Inside View Tiktok) in another comment, which I’ll link to when it’s up. EDIT: link for TikTok analysis here.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Qa = 6
In light of @Drew Spartz’s comment (saying one way to quantify the quality of audience would be to look at the CPM [1]), I’ve compiled my CPM Youtube data and my average Playback-based CPM is $14.8, which according to this website [2] would put my CPM above the 97.5 percentile in the UK, and close to the 97.5 percentile in the US.
Now, this is more anecdotal evidence than data-based, but I’ve met quite a few people over the years (from programs like MATS, or working at AI Safety orgs) who’ve told me they discovered AI Safety from my Inside View podcast. And I expect the SB-1047 documentary to have attracted a niche audience interested in AI regulation.
Given the above, I think it would make sense to have the Qa(Youtube) be between 6 (same as other technical podcasts) and 12 (Robert Miles). For the sake of giving a concrete number, I’ll say 6 to be on par with other podcasts like FLI and CR.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Qf = 0.45
In the paragraph below I’ll say Qf_M for the Qf that Marcus assigns to other creators.
For the fidelity of message, I think it’s a bit of a mixed bag here. As I said previously, I expect the podcasts that Nathan would be willing to crosspost to be on par with his channel’s quality, so in that sense I’d say the fidelity of message for these technical episodes (Owain Evans, Evan Hubinger) to be on par with CR (Qf_M = 0.5). Some of my non-technical interviews are probably closer to discussions we could find on Doom Debates (Qf_M = 0.4), though there are less of them. My SB-1047 documentary is probably similar in fidelity of message to AI in context (Qf_M = 0.5), and this fictional scenario is very similar to Drew’s content (Qf_M = 0.5). I’ve also posted video explainers that range from low effort (Qf around 0.4?) to very high effort (Qf around 0.5?).
Given all of the above, I’d say the Qf for the entire channel is probably around 0.45.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Qm = 1
As you say, for the alignment of message, this is probably the most subjective. I think by definition the content I post is the message that aligns the most with my values (at least for my Youtube content) so I’d say 1 here.
The Inside View (Youtube) - Q = 2.7
Multiplying these numbers I get Q = 2.7. Doing a sanity check, this seems about the same as Cognitive Revolution, which doesn’t seem crazy given we’ve interviewed similar people & the cross-post arguments I’ve said before.
(Obviously if I was to modify all of these Qa, Qf, Qm numbers for all channels I’d probably end up with different quality comparisons).
CPM means Cost Per Mille. In YT Studio it’s defined as “How much advertisers pay every thousand times your Watch Page content is viewed with ads.”
I haven’t done extended research here and expect I’d probably get different results looking at different websites. This one was the first one I found on google so not cherry-picked.