Many
creators
post
videos
on
YouTube
but
take
to
other
platforms
to
actually
interact
with
their
fans
and
viewers.
With
a
new
feature
called
Communities,
YouTube
is
hoping
to
offer
those
types
of
interactive
options
right
on
the
platform,
so
creators
might
not
need
to
take
to
Discord,
WhatsApp,
or
maybe
Instagram
or
Reddit
anymore.
The
Communities
feature,
which
YouTube
launched
today
at
the
Made
on
YouTube
event
in
New
York
City,
is
sort
of
a
mix
of
old-school
forum,
subreddit,
and
Facebook
group.
Once
a
creator
turns
on
their
community,
anyone
who
joins
can
post,
and
people
can
reply
to
each
other.
The
idea
is
presumably
that
you’ll
all
talk
about
things
related
to
the
creator
whose
community
you’re
in,
but
if
you’ve
ever
been
in
a
YouTube
comments
section,
you
know
that’s
not
how
it’ll
work.
There’s
also
a
special
section
for
the
creator’s
own
posts,
where
they
can
share
text,
images,
and
other
stuff.
YouTube
has
been
working
on
various
features
like
this
for
a
long
time.
There’s
even
a
feature
called
Community
already
live
on
the
platform,
though
that
has
really
just
been
a
way
for
creators
to
post
non-video
content,
and
most
creators
don’t
seem
to
use
it
much.
As
YouTube
has
looked
for
ways
to
make
viewers
feel
closer
to
their
favorite
creators
and
be
part
of
their
creative
process,
the
new
Community
system
is
clearly
designed
to
be
much
more
interactive.
All
of
that
new
interaction
could
be
overwhelming
to
some
creators,
so
YouTube
is
also
rolling
out
a
new
tool
called
Community
Hub,
which
replaces
the
comments
section
of
the
YouTube
Studio
app
and
gives
creators
a
combined
view
of
all
the
activity
on
their
channel.
YouTube’s
AI
systems
will
help
surface
good
comments
and
even
offer
reply
suggestions
so
creators
can
get
back
to
as
many
people
as
possible.
Even
with
those
new
tools,
Communities
will
present
plenty
of
complicated
moderation
issues,
especially
now
that
fans
can
post
their
own
content
in
the
channel
instead
of
just
leaving
comments.
That
may
be
why
YouTube
is
allowing
each
creator
to
turn
it
on
for
themselves
and
is
taking
the
rollout
slow;
Communities
are
live
on
a
few
channels
now,
the
company
says,
but
won’t
be
available
widely
until
next
year.
YouTube
may
be
a
video
platform,
but
the
company
has
always
seen
itself
as
a
social
product,
too.
And
it
knows
well
that
the
most
important
way
to
make
a
platform
stick
is
to
give
people
a
way
to
hang
out
with
each
other.
So
even
as
it
comes
up
with
new
ways
for
creators
to
make
and
monetize
videos,
it’s
also
investing
heavily
in
hanging
out.
(Originally posted by David Pierce)
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