YouTube is Full of Old, Unseen Home Videos. Now You Can Watch Them at Random – Slashdot
From a new web project called IMG_0001:
Between 2009 and 2012, iPhones had a built-in “Send to YouTube” button in the Photos app. Many of these uploads kept their default IMG_XXXX filenames, creating a time capsule of raw, unedited moments from random lives. Inspired by Ben Wallace, I made a bot that crawled YouTube and found 5 million of these videos! Watch them below, ordered randomly.
The Washington Post reports that it’s the same 22-year-old software engineer who created Bop Spotter — that phone on a telephone pole using the Shazam app to identify songs people play in public.
And his new site includes only videos “posted before 2015, with fewer than 150 views each and durations shorter than 150 seconds.”
In about 12 hours total, Walz said, he coded a website that takes millions of these unedited, raw videos from more than nine years ago and serves them to viewers at random. The resulting project, titled IMG_0001 and hosted on his personal website, plays out like a glimpse into different worlds: Hit play and your first video may show teenagers practicing a dance in a high school hallway. That wraps up, and it rolls into footage of a dog frolicking in a snowy backyard…
Viewers were gripped by the videos’ unfiltered nature, a contrast to the heavily produced and camera-aware content found on TikTok and YouTube today. Writer Ryan Broderick wrote in his newsletter Garbage Day that the project is “beautiful, haunting, funny, and sort of magical. Like staring into a security camera of the past.” Mashable’s Tim Marcin called it “the kind of authenticity that’s all too rare online these days.”
The website has more than 280,000 views and millions of video plays, Walz said — meaning plenty of viewers are sticking around to watch many of the videos.
The article includes an intesting observation from Christian Sandvig, a digital media professor at the University of Michigan. “The people who made the video might not even remember that they shared them!”