• Theoretically they could deny serving byte ranges before the end-of-ad mark until those bytes have been served and a plausible time (the duration of the ad) has passed. Practically this is likely more expensive than what the ad revenue would yield.

    •  jet   ( @jet@hackertalks.com ) 
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      311 months ago

      Sure, but then you just need a youtube front running cache that preloads videos, or load multiple videos at the same time… i know i’m not the only person who watches youtube at 3x speed, so you could speed up past the ad, etc.

        •  jet   ( @jet@hackertalks.com ) 
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          11 months ago

          Its a arms race, you could always just record the screen with a camera and edit it out as the ultimate.

          you could spin up a vm, and capture the video output

          you could use a graphics driver that lets you inspect the frame buffer, etc

          you could use the side channel attacks to get the decrypted video frames, heartbleed etc, etc etc