>>36995
>>36996
>>36998
I made an account on Bitchute months ago, when it seemed like quite a few content creators were going to close their accounts and leave Youtube. Unfortunately the videos often took a long time to load, and sometimes the media player crashed randomly, and the site didn't even notify you when one of the channels you were subscribed to released a new video. Eventually I stopped using it, since the content creators kept publishing their videos on Youtube as well. It also seemed like the project wasn't actively being worked on, I mean they got a lot of targeted publicity but failed to capitalise on it.
Pew.tube looks too much like Facebook for my taste, with the blue/white colour scheme and reaction emojis under the videos. It doesn't display any videos on the front page and you can't see how long a video is from the search results. How are they going to replace Youtube if they have less than 10% of their features? I also get the feeling that it was designed specifically with mobile users in mind, which pisses me off.
>>36999
Vid.me was shut down a while ago, and I didn't trust them anyway. Hooktube is great for privacy and anti-censorship but it's basically just a proxy for Youtube. Mediagoblin is very very basic and as far as I know there are no instances trying to become an alternative to Youtube. Vimeo is for 'artistic' videos only and I'm pretty sure they don't believe in free speech. Dailymotion is based in France so expect a lot of censorship.