If you're not being deceitful and seeking to violate people's rights for your own purposes (i.e. a politician or someone in that orbit) it's pretty clear.
Like "papers and effect", "shall make no law", stuff like that's pretty hard to screw up if you're not trying.
> The subpoena is tied to a criminal case involving the activist group Stop AI, which has staged protests outside OpenAI’s headquarters. Some members are on trial after allegedly blocking entrances to its San Francisco offices in February. Altman is now required to appear as a witness in the case.
1. Subscribe to what you want to see
2. Bookmark the “your subscriptions” page; don’t visit the home page
2a. Although if you disable watch history, youtube tries to punish you by blanking out the “home” page. I consider that a good thing.
3. Use an ad blocker to hide the comments and side bar (recommended videos)
That’s pretty much what I do. Discoverability happens off-site, which might be a hindrance for you, but I don’t necessarily want more stuff to watch for the sake of more stuff to watch.
Blocking elements with ad block works well, but for convenience I use the extension Unhook. It can redirect the home feed to subscriptions, hide end screen cards, end screen feed, live chat, auto generated mixes, notifications, shorts, etc. I also use a tampermonkey script to auto set theater mode and resolution (necessary for incognito mode).
It would be nice if youtube could include some of these handy features in the settings, but it is not something they want to do it seems.
I use an extension called Unhook which has, as one of its many great options, a mode that disables the algorithmic youtube feed and auto-redirects the homepage to your subscriptions page (which is just reverse-chronological)
(it also lets you disable Shorts and suggestions and so on, pretty fantastic actually)
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