There's not much we can agree on in this world of strife and tears, but there is one opinion that's just about universal: YouTube ads suck. Want to watch a video? Watch this ad first. Want to watch another video? Watch this longer ad! Can you click past the ad before it's over? Maybe—pay close attention to find out. As for ad blockers, YouTube is doing its best to make those more hassle than they're worth. It's obnoxious as hell, and it sucks.
Given how offputting and utterly detrimental to the experience its ads are, you might fairly wonder why YouTube keeps shovelling them on. Why does it work so hard to make YouTube worse? The answer is very simple: Those hated YouTube ads make, as they say in the Canadian scientific community, a metric ass-ton of cash.
Alphabet's (via ) reveals that YouTube ads raked in more than [[link]] $10.4 billion in the quarter—to be clear, that's 10 billion smackers in just three months. That's a relatively small slice of the total Alphabet pie, which topped $96 billion (again, in three months), but it's a staggering amount of money for three months of ads on the 'Tubes. It's also a new record, [[link]] marking a 14% increase over YouTube's advertising revenue in Q4 2023, which hit $9.2 billion.
It's possible to dodge the deluge of ads, of course, by signing up for the subscription service. That goes for $14 per month or $140 per year, which strikes me as an exorbitant amount of money for, y'know, YouTube. It'll be a cold day in hell before I throw that kind of money at, again, YouTube, but at least a few of my compatriots here at PC Gamer—like associate editor —do pony up for it, and I'm ashamed to say they all claim it's worth it.
Oh, but don't worry, because it'll probably get worse. "We believe that AI will revolutionize every part of the marketing value chain and, over the past quarter, we’ve seen how our customers are increasingly focusing on optimizing their use of AI," chief business officer Philipp Schindler said. "As an example, Petco used Demand Gen campaigns across targeting, creative generation, and bidding to find new pet parent audiences across YouTube. They achieved a 275% higher return on ad spend and a 74% higher click through rate than their social benchmarks."