ReadWriteWeb

Goodbye to the YouTube Address: White House Goes with Akamai Instead

Written by Frederic Lardinois / March 2, 2009 8:57 AM / 4 Comments

whitehouse150.jpgThe president's weekly video address was often called the 'YouTube address,' but after complaints from privacy activists, the White House has now decided to leave YouTube behind and use Akamai's content delivery network to embed the president's weekly address on the White House web site. The White House will still post videos to YouTube, but, by default, it now directs visitors to Vimeo instead of Google's streaming video service.

No More Cookies

In the past, we also chided the White House for seemingly giving preferential treatment to YouTube over other video streaming services, but it looks like privacy concerns were the main reason for this weekend's switch. Because Google uses long-term tracking cookies whenever somebody watches a video, the White House's web site was breaking the federal government's strict rules about using cookies on government sites - at least until the White House issued itself an exemption from these rules.

As Chris Soghoian notes, the timing of this move is somewhat odd, as YouTube just rolled out a new feature called delayed cookies, which lets those who embed a video decide if they want to allow Google to set a non-session cookie when others are watching the embedded video. However, it seems like this move came just a bit too late for the White House.

Of course, the White House will continue to post the video addresses on YouTube as well, but thanks to this new solution, the White House website will not set a cookie on your machine every time you play an embedded video anymore.

New Player

Even though YouTube is the de-facto standard for web video today, visitors to the White House web site won't have to miss out on most of YouTube's most compelling features. The new player allows for videos to be embedded or to be downloaded as an MP4 file. Videos can also be played back in full-screen mode and feature captions in English and Spanish. Interestingly, the player now also features a new link: 'also available here,' which currently points to the White House's page on Vimeo. While this is nice, it would also be nice if this link actually pointed to the wide range of services that the White House uploads the weekly address to. Another complaint we have is that the new embeds now automatically start playing whenever a page is opened, without the option to turn this off.


Comments

Subscribe to comments for this post OR Subscribe to comments for all ReadWriteWeb posts

  1. One of the founders of Akamai was killed on American Airlines flight 11 when it crashed on September 11, 2001

    Posted by: RAPatton Posted on FriendFeed   | March 2, 2009 9:18 AM



  2. People are so paranoid these days. So what if they use cookies that don't expire after a long period of time. Just block cookies, you don't need them enabled to watch videos.

    I will say, I prefer Vimeo over other services, so it is a nice switch.

    Posted by: Anrkisr | March 2, 2009 10:13 AM



  3. Interestingly enough, I work on a government computer for the Army.mil Web team as the primary video content editor. I deal all day with helping people best find our videos on http://www.Army.mil/AMP, YouTube and Vimeo, with or without Flash and JavaScript. As a member of the Web Team, I have some of the most leeway with what IT lets me "see" on the Internet. However, I cannot see this WhiteHouse.gov embedded video.

    Weird. (I personally also prefer Vimeo :))

    Posted by: Emma Dozier | March 2, 2009 10:31 AM



  4. Someone looks so exhausted. :(

    Posted by: MIchelle McCormack | March 2, 2009 11:33 AM



Leave a comment

Optional: Sign in with Connect Facebook   Sign in with Twitter Twitter   Sign in with OpenID OpenID  |  

If you think Twitter is big, check out the Real-Time Web
RWW SPONSORS



FOLLOW @RWW ON TWITTER

ReadWriteWeb on Facebook



TEXT LINK ADS



RWW PARTNERS