Australian firm
uSocial has
launched a service designed to give YouTube users and marketers access to a
large number of clicks on their videos.
The firm is selling 'views' on YouTube videos with two options, targeted and
not targeted, and in a range of categories. Viewers are real people, according
to uSocial.
"Starting in packages of 5,000 views to be delivered over around a week,
we'll begin delivering you quality targeted viewership from real traffic sources
around the web, and from within YouTube itself," uSocial said in a statement.
"Not only will this deliver you instant, quality traffic to your videos, as
well as the web site you're promoting, but you're also going to be showing up
better in YouTube searches as time goes on.
"All targeted YouTube views we deliver are real people and not some kind of
fake bot or script traffic, so there is no risk in having your account banned by
YouTube. And that's our guarantee."
USocial also sells votes on Digg, and recently caused controversy by selling
Facebook
friends and
Twitter
followers. The company said that it sees YouTube as an obvious extension of
its services.
"We are always looking at expanding our operations in the social marketing
world and YouTube was the obvious next step," said uSocial chief executive Leon
Hill.
"Using several of our methods, we can get a totally unknown video in front of
the eyes of potentially millions of people which can mean megabucks to anyone
who's in business."
V3.co.uk asked YouTube parent Google to comment on the announcement,
but has not received a response.
However, Google did explain that searches are "based on relevance to a
particular query and cannot be influenced by third parties, beyond producing
good content and ensuring it is labelled or tagged correctly".
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