National Post

Canadians’ love of YouTube earns them first look at new feature.

Population has affinity for video

- Josh McConnell

TORONTO • Canadians share more videos online than anyone else, so it’s fitting that Youtube is unveil- ing its latest social feature in this country.

Beginning Wednesday, Canadians will start receiving a new social chat platform within Google’s YouTube app for iOS and Android. Users will be able to directly send videos to others using a new button, plus create group conversati­ons similar to other messaging applicatio­ns that allow for discussion or interactiv­e features such as giving videos a heart icon to show appreciati­on. The idea is to keep the sharing experience within YouTube instead of switching between other applicatio­ns, which the company hopes will create a less cumbersome experience.

“We wanted to start with Canada because Canadians are sharing 15 per cent more videos than the average user, so it’s interestin­g to see this is actually a behaviour that happens more in Canada,” Shimrit Ben Yair, San Francisco- based product manager for Google, which owns YouTube, said in an interview. “We launched this feature as an experiment last year ( to a small group) and now we are rolling it out worldwide.”

The number of hours people s pend watching YouTube continues to grow globally each year, especially on mobile and tablets where the numbers were up 60 per cent year- over- year in 2015, according to YouTube’s internal data. Seventy- five per cent of Canadian YouTube users visit the service several times a day, the firm added.

This trend falls in line with what other companies such as Twitter and Facebook have said about Canada, noting the country consumes a lot of online video and therefore makes for a great testing ground for global rollouts. Canadians spent 44- per- cent more time watching digital video during the past four years, according to the research firm eMarketer, with mobile watching up 127 per cent.

“We thought this was a nice way to expand and really answer a need that exists in the market,” said Ben Yair, who headed up the project.

Because the new social functional­ity essentiall­y acts like a chat platform — including the ability to name rooms — participan­ts can also use the in- app feature for basic things such as sharing links or making plans. When a YouTube video is shared in the room, users can move the video around on the screen so they can keep chatting while watching.

“The idea is if you have a couple of friends that you share a lot of videos with, this makes it really easy to have that conversati­on happen right while you are watching YouTube,” said Benoît de Boursetty, one of YouTube’s product managers. “You don’t have to swap between apps, it is a lot more convenient and the user experience once you are in it is a lot better.”

In order to get the new feature, Canadians have to be signed in to a YouTube account and create a channel on their profile ( though don’t need to have any videos uploaded). Once a YouTube video is shared with someone using the new button, the recipient will have the feature unlocked on their account no matter where they reside — meaning Canadians, not Google, will be the ones spreading the tool to other countries.

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