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Few days ago, speaking at an internet forum in Taipei, Steve Chen said
that half of the YouTube users are from outside United States,
so versions in other languages are needed.
As you can see, Chen’s comments may be interpreted as an
early announcement. Starting today the users from Brazil,
France, Ireland, Italy,
Japan, Netherlands, Poland,
Spain and the UK
will be able to access YouTube’s localized sites that are fully translated with
local homepages and search functions.
YouTube also said that over time each local site will
benefit from an entirely "local" experience that will allow for
country-specific video rankings and comments, as well as Video, Channel,
Categories and Community sections.
The new sites have launched on the following local domains:
www.youtube.com.br, www.youtube.fr, www.youtube.ie, www.youtube.it,
www.youtube.jp, www.youtube.nl, www.youtube.pl, www.youtube.es, and
www.youtube.co.uk
"Video is universal and allows people around the world
to communicate and exchange ideas. With our announcement today we are expanding
upon our already global platform to make it even more relevant for our local
communities," said Chad Hurley, YouTube's co-founder and CEO.
"YouTube will now be more accessible and interesting to a worldwide
audience, and we look forward to rolling out in other countries in the months
to come."
In a similar expansion, Flickr, Yahoo-owned photo-sharing
site announced few days ago the addition of seven languages in order to
facilitate the user’s interaction.
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