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Microsoft IM Blocking YouTube Links

A number of readers are sending word that the blogosphere and Twittersphere are alight with reports of Microsoft's new block on messages containing YouTube URLs. Both MSN Messenger and Windows Live Messenger reportedly implement the block. One blogger sniffed the network to discover that such messages receive a NAK from Microsoft's servers. Microsoft has been blocking messages by keyword, as an anti-phishing measure, for some time, but *.youtube.com would not seem to provoke much worry about phishing. Instead, as B.E.T.A Daily speculates, "This block seems to be related to the recent launch of Messenger TV in 20 countries which allows for sharing video clips from MSN Video on Messenger." Hard to get away with in an arena where you don't enjoy a monopoly.

10 of 364 comments (clear)

  1. This should surprise no one by Presence2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's Microsoft. "What can we get away with today?" Enough said.

  2. This seems rather foolish by AmonEzhno · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Refusing to carry the links of one of THE most popular web pages on whole internet seems like a poor business decision. If you can't share the links you want then many people are just going to switch.
    I mean who doesn't share youtube videos over IM?
    Sorry but this just seems ridiculous

  3. Re:Its not censorship by wizardforce · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The definition of censorship doesn't depend on who is doing it.

    --
    Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
  4. True, however... by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The article didn't claim it was censorship. It made the (purely factual) claim that links to youtube were being blocked by msn messenger. Which they are.

    Sounds like you're the sensationalist one out for attention.

  5. They are gonna regret this by eiapoce · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ms has the habit of getting into troube. This time they performed exceptionally well.

    We have a legislation here (italy) that state that tampering with electronic communications with the aim to impede or modify the contents of the messages is a felony. This is because the same legislation for standard mail has been applied to emails, phone conversations and IM.


    By my point of view MS is getting sacked really bad in EU. (And they fully deserve it!)

  6. Re:Take off your tinfoil hats... by Sibko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So let me get this straight, you think the simplest explanation is that someone screwed up and accidentally added youtube, a site that receives millions of visitors a month, is owned by Microsoft's rival Google, and is the most ubiquitous video sharing website in the world; to a blacklist. For several days. [And AFAIK, is still blacklisted.]

    Personally, I think a simper explanation is that someone with poor judgment thought banning youtube links would somehow benefit Microsoft. Maybe the decision was a good one, or a bad one. But I certainly don't think it was just "It's an accident, lol!"

  7. Re:But wait, there's more! by BlueStrat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People with email@msn.com addresses never receive YahooGroups.com invites. I get them bounced back to me routinely.

    This IM blocking is just another reason to boycott msn.com, hotmail.com & live.com.

    [Of course, YahooGroups now adds spaces in URLs I try to send to my groups. I have to TinyURL everything these days.]


    Yahoo has been blocking Photobucket.com links for ages in Yahoo chat. This is nothing new. Seems like it's getting to be pretty much S.O.P. these days for large 'net-service companies that provide multiple services including IM/chatroom-type services. Just forbid URLs to competitions' websites and services from being communicated over your services, and to heck with what the user wants.

    Nevermind that most peoples' reactions that discover this that I've seen was anger, disgust, and frustration, along with a fierce determination to *never* use Flickr (Yahoos' photo/video upload service) just because of this stupidity, and even closing accounts there. Way to retain users, there, Yahoo!

    I'm waiting to see if it comes to the point that things like the MSN Messenger installer silently removes competing IM/chat service client software. Or when things like Yahoo Messenger blocks the installation of competing services' software, or refuses to install while that software is present, and/or adds entries to the hosts file, blocking access to competitors'websites and services.

    When will these corporations learn that users naturally tend to use multiple providers for any one function or service, and that these kinds of childish behaviors only alienates them?

    Cheers!

    Strat

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  8. Re:Its not censorship by Curien · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Any other form is perfectly legal.

    Yes and no. ISPs, phone companies, etc are all legally protected (much more than normal property owners) from liability for the content that crosses their networks so long as they don't cross a certain threshold of editorial control.

    I'd say that this definitely crosses that threshold. IOW, MS is taking legal responsibility for the content of messages passed on their system. You could sue Microsoft if someone verbally assaults you on MSN, and you might actually have a chance in court.

    So while the act itself may be "perfectly legal", it does have strong legal implications.

    --
    It's always a long day... 86400 doesn't fit into a short.
  9. May 10, 2008: The day Slashdot died. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Once again, Twitter, Slashdot's most maniacal anti-Microsoft troll, beats on the truthout.org dead horse. Of course, Twitter and Marc Ash are cut from the same cloth. They both believe that they are so noble, and their causes so righteous, that they can freely stoop to any depth, and engage in whatever underhanded behaviour they please.

    Marc Ash was caught spamming totally unrelated Yahoo! Groups by joining and blasting emails through group addresses.

    Twitter threadjacks a story, then shills his comment with three of his army of sockpuppets, including two accounts that are impostors of his critics.

    And Slashdot does nothing.

    Instead, Rob Malda posts this gem to the front page, claiming that Microsoft "prefers" Flash to Silverlight because Microsoft doesn't have some super-special-secret transmogrifier that could spontaneously transform each and every Flash animation on each and every web site Microsoft owns into Silverlight content, and didn't use it the very minute Silverlight 1.0 was released to the public.

    Slashdot has turned reason and common sense and honesty against its own readers.

    Delete your bookmarks, people. Redirect slashdot.org to 127.0.0.1 in your hosts file, in case you get the urge to go back. There's no point.

    There are plenty of places where advocacy of Free and Open Source software is done without the community being exploited. Slashdot is no longer one of those places. Their hatred of Microsoft has become all-consuming, and they're proud of it. Time to leave them shouting into empty space.

  10. Re:Um, they don't have an IM monopoly! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's the girls. The girls choose one at random and the guys all switch to that.

    MSN, SMS, MySpace... wherever the teenage girls go... the guys soon follow.

    Teenage Girls sadly are dictating modern technology. Why do you think SMS costs so much? Highschool girls who don't have to pay for their cell phone bills, that's who!