Every user has something to say.
Steve Chen
There's a waterfall of content that you're missing out on.
YouTube is a platform, a distribution vehicle.
There's just not that many videos I want to watch.
Almost every time we get together with family or friends, the conversation ends up being about food.
If a restaurant kitchen is your office, Nom is for you.
There are a lot of services trying to solve the information discovery problem, and no one has got it right yet.
If you have a food blog and want to connect with a bigger audience, Nom is for you.
If you've ever snapped a picture of your dinner, Nom is for you.
We noticed that the most popular videos at YouTube showed people making things.
Nom is a place for food lovers.
It is impossible to effectively monitor the huge volume of videos that are out there. It is often difficult to find out who owns the copyright on individual videos. Differing copyright laws in different countries also make the whole process harder.
Everybody carries a phone with them, but they may not have a computer.
While there are certainly food-focused content out there on the Web and on TV, most of this content need to weave through many layers of editing before it reaches the viewer.
Our goal is to have YouTube on every screen - to take it from the PC to the living room and the mobile phone.
There are lots of new products and new services making adding content easier. But there's not many people on the other side helping users digest that content.
By augmenting the pages in the upload process with educational text regarding the type of content that can be uploaded to YouTube, we have seen a sharp overall reduction with users uploading copyrighted materials.
Chefs love to have that control and power to control the message they want to deliver.
It's just exciting to be able to see what someone around the world is eating in Sicily or Tokyo.
YouTube is a free service that is extremely easy to use. There are no downloads, and hundreds of audio and video formats are instantly converted to Flash, which makes it fast and easy for the community to watch and share video.
From our experiences with the site in Japan, we've come to ask, 'What can we learn about syndicating content from mobile devices and getting it up on YouTube?'
What we have noticed at YouTube is that many users who have uploaded infringing content are unaware that it's illegal to do so.