300 Channels Waiting for You


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Watch Internet TV with Democracy Player

100% Open Source

You've probably watched hundreds of tiny videos on websites: it's tedious. Democracy Player makes video on the internet less frustrating and more enjoyable. You can subscribe to channels of internet video, download videos, and watch them fullscreen, one after the other-- all in one application. Internet video becomes internet TV. It's free and open for everyone to watch and broadcast.

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More Features

Auto-Download

Set your favorite channels to Auto-Download new videos as soon as they are available. You'll always have something new to watch.

RSS is everywhere

Democracy can subscribe to any video RSS feed (video podcasts). Look for 'Subscribe' buttons on your favorite web sites.

Seamless Bittorrent

Democracy seamlessly integrates Bittorrent and doesn't leech.

Fullscreen

Lean back and watch fullscreen

New Items

A blue circle next to a channel means new videos are available for download. Green circles mean new videos are ready to watch.

Manage Videos

My Collection lists all the videos you've downloaded and can be quickly searched.

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https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/435106-300-channels-waiting-for-you/
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You can add your own content. You just need their RSS.

Lets take "TWiT" for example.

Click on "Add Chanel" and paste the RSS feed: http://twitorrents.com/bm/rss.php?i=5

Yeah, without look at the website to see, and without look at the About/Help box I'm going to say this just gets videos that it finds in RSS feeds.

I know, I'm a genius. :D

This topic is now closed to further replies.
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    • Bluesky COO warns social media regulations could destroy competition from small startups by Paul Hill Fears that increasing government control of social media risks regulatory capture by the biggest social media firms were raised again recently. Bluesky’s chief operating officer said in an interview that social media bans for children and tighter regulations for social media firms risk creating a world where there are only a few social media platforms run by companies with the deepest pockets. Regulations on social media firms have been very lax since they appeared for mainstream users in the 2000’s. This gave Meta, Snapchat, and Google time to build up their user bases and get entrenched, with Meta being the most successful. Now that Meta has succeeded, it has been attempting regulatory capture. By pushing for more regulations of social media, Meta hopes to make it more difficult for rivals to challenge it. For its part, it doesn’t need to worry about the cost of regulation because it has a lot of money to spend, whereas startups do not. Speaking to CNBC, Rose Wang, Bluesky’s chief operating officer, said: “I support the protection and the safety of youth, the question that we have then is at what cost, because essentially what I’m scared of is in the long term, we’re headed to a world where there’s about three to five platforms, and extreme heavy regulation of those platforms, and basically the whole compliance teams of these platforms are 10 times the size of our entire team. So, basically, we’re living in a world where it’s almost impossible for smaller entrants to come in and build healthier spaces. These platforms have led to a place where the bottom line is the thing that drives what they do... so I understand why governments have to step in and regulate, because the platforms have done nothing right.” She said that while she is not against regulation, there needs to be more channels between the small to mid-sized players and regulators to help protect them. She says that big tech players, on the other hand, “who we know are circumventing regulation,” need to be regulated. Essentially, the Bluesky position is one of nuance, rather than absolutes. While Bluesky’s proposal may preserve competition in the social media space, it still doesn’t address the massive privacy implications these age verification measures introduce, such as handing over sensitive identity documents to access age-gated content. Source: CNBC
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