The popularity of video sharing services has increased exponentially in recent years, but this popularity is accompanied by challenges associated with the tremendous scale of user bases and massive amounts of video data. A known inefficiency of video sharing services with useruploaded content is widespread video duplication. These duplicate videos are often of different aspect ratios, can contain overlays or additional borders, or can be excerpted from a longer, original video, and thus can be difficult to detect. The proliferation of duplicate videos can have an impact at many levels, and accurate assessment of duplicate levels is a critical step toward mitigating their effects on both video sharing services and network infrastructure. In this work, we combine video sampling methods, automated video comparison techniques, and manual validation to estimate duplicate levels within large collections of videos. The combined strategies yield a 31.7% estimated video duplicate ratio across all YouTube videos, with 24.0% storage occupied by duplicates. These high duplicate ratios motivate the need for further examination of the systems-level tradeoffs associated with video deduplication versus storing large number of duplicates.
CITATION STYLE
Liu, Y., Blasiak, S., Xiao, W., Li, Z., & Chen, S. (2015). A Quantitative Study of Video Duplicate Levels in Youtube. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 8995, pp. 235–248). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15509-8_18
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