图片0416 (2024)
IMG_0416 (2024)

原始链接: https://ben-mini.com/2024/img-0416

2009年至2012年间,苹果的“发送到YouTube”功能——直接集成到iPhone和iPod Touch中——极大地增加了平台上的视频上传量。然而,这种便利带来了一个意想不到的副作用:视频通常会以基于iOS文件命名规则的默认标题上传(“IMG_XXXX”)。 如今,在YouTube上搜索这些“IMG_XXXX”标题,可以发现对日常生活的迷人且未经过滤的观察。这些不是精心制作的视频;它们通常是意外上传——原始、未编辑的瞬间,捕捉了从开箱书籍和家庭游戏之夜到令人惊讶的感人生活事件,例如怀孕揭晓。 由此产生的信息流非常真实,为人们提供了观察陌生人生活的独特窗口。虽然其中许多内容平淡无奇,但也有一些揭示了亲密时刻和意想不到的故事,这些故事在网上保存了十多年。这是一个未经过滤的人类体验的数字时间胶囊,证明了在短暂的一段时间内,技术无意中创造了互联网上最真实的社交信息流。

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原文

Between 2009 and 2012, Apple iPhones and iPod Touches included a feature called “Send to YouTube” that allowed users to upload videos directly to YouTube from the Photos app.

iphone-youtube

The feature worked… really well. In fact, YouTube reported a 1700% increase in total video uploads during the first half of 2009- crediting that growth to its strong integrative ties to Apple and social networks. However, this two-click upload feature was short-lived when Apple severed ties with YouTube by removing its homegrown app in 2012.

While Send to YouTube can be thoroughly analyzed as a milestone on the “frenemy” timeline between Apple and Google, I want to explore a pleasant consequence of this moment. Apple uses the ‘IMG_XXXX’ naming convention for all images and videos captured on iOS devices, where XXXX is a unique sequence number¹. The first image you take is named “IMG_0001”, the second is “IMG_0002” and so on. During the Send to YouTube era of 2009 and 2012, the title of one’s YouTube video was defaulted to this naming convention. Unwitting content creators would then upload their videos on a public site with a barely-searchable name. To this day, there are millions of these videos.

Screenshot 2024-11-03 at 10.37.58 AM

Try searching for “IMG_XXXX” on YouTube, replacing “XXXX” with your favorite numbers (I used my birthday, 0416). See what you get!

There’s something surreal about these videos that engages you in a way you’ve never felt. None were edited, produced, or paraded for mass viewing. In fact, many were likely uploaded by accident or with a misunderstanding that complete strangers could see it. YouTube automatically removes harmful or violent content, so what remains exists in a unique, almost paradoxical state: forbidden, yet harmless. Putting all this together, searching IMG_XXXX offers the most authentic social feed ever seen on the Internet- in video, no less!

While many videos are redundant snippets of a concerts, basketball games, or kids’ recitals, you also get one-of-a-kind videos that provides a glimpse into a complete stranger’s life. You’ll see a tumultuous event that made them, their partner, or their friend say, “hey, let’s record this”. I’d like to show you three of these videos that I found in my search.

IMG_0416 (Mar 17, 2015) - 23 views

The video shows a woman excitedly unboxing a book she received in the mail. From context clues, she seems to be a wife and mother from Memphis who’s unboxing the first published copy of her book. She thanks the friends, family, and publishers who made this happen.

After a quick Google Search, I was able to find the book: A Profit / Prophet to Her Husband: Are you ready to be a wife? The book is meant “to help wives understand who they are and who they were designed to be.” It clocks in at 94 pages and has 30 ratings on Amazon! Go IMG_0416! I don’t care what you’re creating- I’m just a fan of creators. It looks like she kept at it- making a second book in 2020!

IMG_0416.MOV (June 24, 2015) - 26 views

The video appears to show a woman playing a matching card game that teaches you “the basics of the potash stuff” according to the cameraman. As the woman (who I assume is the cameraman’s supportive mother) flips two matching cards, she reads off the countries who produce the most potash.

I honestly didn’t know anything about potash! Turns out that it is a mineral with large amount of potassium, which is helpful as a plant fertilizer. With Canada producing the largest reserves in the world, the vast majority of Canadian potash is found in Saskatchewan. I wonder if this family lives in Canada. Or, if this is just another school project of useless facts… I miss those!

IMG_0416 (Feb 8, 2011) - 114 views

Let’s end on a fun one. The video shows a young man snorting powdered sugar and dealing with the consequences of it. Given his BU hoodie, Dunkin’ Donuts location, and ironic depiction of drug use, I gotta say this is a VERY Boston video.

What’s genuinely heartwarming is the shared laughter between the man, the camerawoman, and the motherly figure leaving Dunkin’. The camerawoman calls her “Myra”, suggesting they all know each other. We have nothing better to do, so we’re snorting powdered sugar captures an essence of suburban America that I’m sure many of us can relate to.


Edit: 11/3/24

IMG_0417 (Mar 14, 2014) - 16 views

I found this after posting, and it’s just too amazing to not include… a woman filming her partner as he finds out she’s pregnant.

Assuming all has gone well, the child is now almost 10 years old. I wonder if the family even knows this video still exists.

After posting this on Hackernews, it looks like somebody commented on the video lol. I hope the family receives a notification it and is able to share this with their kid.

img0417 comment


¹ Edit: The IMG_XXXX sequence isn’t truly unique—after 10,000 photos, the numbering restarts at IMG_0001 (Source).

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