The first video uploaded April 23, 2005 -- an 18-second clip of co-founder Jawed Karim at the San Diego Zoo -- offered little indication the service would become the leader in Internet video and a key part of the Google empire.
A decade later, YouTube has more than one billion users, with localized service in 75 countries and 61 languages.
Some 300 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute, and "every day people watch hundreds of millions of hours on YouTube and generate billions of views," according to the YouTube statistics page.
"Everyone in the world knows YouTube, even my mom," said Dan Rayburn, analyst at Frost and Sullivan who also writes a blog about streaming media.
YouTube played a key role in the Arab Spring uprisings and other political movements. It has faced bans in some countries, notably for the distribution of a film about Muhammad which offended some Muslims, and has faced criticism for being used to distribute unauthorized copyrighted content.
Google bought YouTube in 2006 for some $1.6 billion in stock -- raising eyebrows about what was then the Internet firm's biggest acquisition -- and now generates considerable revenue, but also has high costs.
"Even today, Google will not say if YouTube is profitable," Rayburn noted. "But 90 percent of analysts say it is not profitable."
Rayburn said that even though YouTube popularized the idea of online video, the videos are mainly "user generated content" that does not attract revenue from users or advertisers.
"YouTube has struggled to find its core business. The vast amount of content on it cannot be monetized."
But a report by Morgan Stanley analyst Benjamin Swinburne earlier this year said YouTube is "a high-growth, valuable asset" for Google with tremendous potential.
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