There is a moment every engineer has when they first truly think about what YouTube does. Not the product, but the machine. Someone in rural Indonesia uploads a phone video of a street cat doing something peculiar. Within minutes, that video is available in crisp 1080p to a user in São Paulo, another in Stockholm, and a third on a slow connection in rural Kenya who gets a smooth 360p stream without a single rebuffering event. The recommendation engine is already deciding who else should see it. The ad system has already matched it to relevant advertisers. The copyright scanner has already checked it against a database of millions of audio and video fingerprints.

That is not magic. That is engineering, done at a scale that very few systems in the world have ever had to achieve.
YouTube serves over 2 billion logged-in users every month. More than 500 hours of video are uploaded to the platform every single minute. The platform delivers over a billion hours of video playback per day. When you build a system at that scale, you cannot afford to think about problems the way you would in a startup. Every architectural decision has second and third order consequences. A naive caching strategy does not just waste a few dollars — it can collapse under load during a major event. A poorly designed upload pipeline does not just frustrate one creator — it fails millions simultaneously.
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