there is a 50% chance it is because they are not sure of how many views you may have received
if oyu wanna make a video u could do it on youtube than you see how many views u get and if they like it u be on make your mark
Yes, Justin Bieber's video, "Baby", has more than one billion views. Few other videos as of 2016 have passed this mark and is a feat truly difficult in accomplishing.
37 Million Views. Very Few Videos Have Made It Past This Mark...
You need to mark the video as a favorite.
Youtube is good at answering question such as these. also google it with question mark ? :)
Kevjumba's most viewed video is currently called "Nice Guys" with about 20 million views, which was a collaboration between Ryan Higa, Chester See, and himself. Kevkumba also has other videos that have passed the 10 million views mark, with the "Ask Kevjumba" video being his second most viewed video at about 15 million views.
The first video that kevjumba uploaded was titled "Backyard" and was uploaded on February 5, 2007. Since his upload, his video has passed over the 1.5 million views mark and with all his other videos added together, forms a total view count of over 320 million video views.
Yes, you can use footage from videos if they have a Creative Commons mark on them, or if you get permission and are granted permission from the uploader/owner of the content originally to post the footage in your video. Make sure you read up on the copyright rules as all copyright rules apply in YouTube and abiding by YouTube's rules will help maintain your presence on YouTube.
Yes, YouTube video previews are safe. Adsense and Google are aware of this and don’t penalize sites for using them. If the preview links to a site that isn’t safe, the search engine will definitely penalize the site for that.
No. Currently no YouTube video has more than 370 million views. Edit: As of September 2012 the most viewed video on YouTube has 771 million views. As of January 11, 2013, Gangnam Style, by PSY, has 1,162,815,857 views.
It's currently not possible to download a song on YouTube. You can, however, record anything by having a video recorder or other recording device in real life. YouTube videos are not intentionally made for downloading usually, unless it has a Creative Commons mark in the "about" section.
The symbol for a question mark is simply called a "question mark."