A Friendly Update
December 7th, 2011 | Published in Youtube API
As you might have recently read, there’s an upcoming change that affects any “friends” you might have associated with your YouTube account. Your existing “friend” connections will be automatically converted into Address Book contacts, and when you visit YouTube.com you will be given the option of creating subscriptions to any or all of those accounts.
If you’re a developer, you might ask yourself how this impacts your existing code that uses the YouTube Data API. One specific feed that’s exposed via the API is no longer relevant: the friends activity feed. The users of your application may have converted their old friends to corresponding subscriptions, and in that case you can make use of a new feed in our staging environment that contains activity updates from the accounts you’re subscribed to:
https://gdata.youtube.com/feeds/api/users/default/subtivity
As of right now on our staging server, and around December 14 in production, we will automatically translate requests to the existing friends activity feed’s URL into requests to the new subscriptions activity feed, rather than just returning an empty friends activity feed. While this translation will take place transparently behind the scenes, we encourage all developers who are using the friends activity feed to explicitly update their code to point to the new subscription activity feed as a best practice.
There are also API calls related to YouTube contact management that would accept either an email address (in a element) or a YouTube username (in a element). As a side effect of this migration, you can only use for these calls, which is what the API’s documentation has recommended doing all along. An attempt to use will lead to a HTTP 400 error response.
Thanks for bearing with us through these changes. If you have any questions or concerns, please let us know in our developer forum.
Cheers,
—Jeff Posnick, YouTube API Team
If you’re a developer, you might ask yourself how this impacts your existing code that uses the YouTube Data API. One specific feed that’s exposed via the API is no longer relevant: the friends activity feed. The users of your application may have converted their old friends to corresponding subscriptions, and in that case you can make use of a new feed in our staging environment that contains activity updates from the accounts you’re subscribed to:
https://gdata.youtube.com/feeds/api/users/default/subtivity
As of right now on our staging server, and around December 14 in production, we will automatically translate requests to the existing friends activity feed’s URL into requests to the new subscriptions activity feed, rather than just returning an empty friends activity feed. While this translation will take place transparently behind the scenes, we encourage all developers who are using the friends activity feed to explicitly update their code to point to the new subscription activity feed as a best practice.
There are also API calls related to YouTube contact management that would accept either an email address (in a
Thanks for bearing with us through these changes. If you have any questions or concerns, please let us know in our developer forum.
Cheers,
—Jeff Posnick, YouTube API Team