Skip to main content

Amazon may be working on a YouTube rival with an awkward name

Amazon Fire TV
Bill Roberson/Digital Trends
Earlier in December, Google pulled YouTube from both the Amazon Echo Show and its Fire TV devices. Lately, there have been signs that the two companies may be patching things up, but Amazon may be considering creating its own competitor to YouTube.

Additionally, Amazon filed two trademark requests with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for two names: Amazontube and Opentube. These applications went unnoticed for some time until the requests were spotted by TV Answer Man. The names alone might not mean much, but there is much more there than just names.

The descriptions for the names in the application include a fair amount of detail, including that the possible streaming services would provide “non-downloadable pre-recorded audio, visual and audiovisual works via wireless networks on a variety of topics.” The application also notes that the services would offer “online network services that enable users to share content, photos videos, text, data, images and other electronic works relating to entertainment.”

While this doesn’t sound exactly like YouTube, it sounds close. Though not mentioned in the descriptions, it seems like this possible service would offer tight integration with Amazon’s Alexa. Amazon registered three new domain names in December, as reported by Domain Name Wire: AlexaOpenTube.com, AmazonAlexaTube.com, and AmazonOpenTube.com.

Of course, this doesn’t mean that another video streaming service from Amazon will launch in the coming months, or even further out. Companies register trademarks they don’t end up using fairly regularly, not to mention that Google and its parent company Alphabet would likely pursue legal action based on the names alone. The latter could be easily changed, but as numerous companies have found out the hard way, launching a competitor to a juggernaut like YouTube isn’t quite as easy as it may seem.

Considering the date of the filings, this could have been a reflexing move based on Google’s plans to remove YouTube from the Echo Show. Of course, Google’s move could have been in response to the company hearing rumors of Amazon planning a competitor to YouTube. It’s likely that we’ll never know, but at least for the time being, Amazon is keeping quiet about what it intends to do with those names.

Editors' Recommendations

Kris Wouk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
YouTube TV tips and tricks: how to get the most out Google’s live TV service
YouTube TV app icon on Apple TV.

There’s a reason YouTube TV has found itself the leader in live-streaming video. In fact, it has about twice as many subscribers to its cable-TV replacement as the next biggest platform. And. among other reasons like price, reliability, and abundance of channels, it is just packed with features.
In fact, YouTube TV has so many features tucked away in there that you’ll be forgiven if you don’t spot them all at first. But we’ve done the legwork. We’ve watched hours and hours of YouTube TV. Weeks and months, really. We’ve flipped all the buttons. We’ve pressed all the switches. (Wait — reverse that.) And we’ve put together a list of what we think are the most important — if not always obvious — YouTube TV tips and tricks. And we're not just talking about NFL Sunday Ticket.
This isn’t everything. There are still a few other places to explore in the settings menu, as well as when you’re watching shows and movies. But these are the YouTube TV tips and tricks we absolutely think you must know.

Record a show to watch later

Read more
This long-awaited YouTube TV feature is a channel-flipper’s dream
The previous channel feature on YouTube TV on a TV.

The move from cable to streaming for live TV changed a lot of things. Choice, for one. (We have more.) Price, for another. (You're likely paying less.) But not all changes were great. If you're of the channel-surfing variety — or love to flip back and forth between two channels — you've likely been missing that feature.

YouTube TV — the most popular streaming service in the U.S. with more than 8 million subscribers — has addressed the latter. After having been teased in some A/B testing for a while now (that is, some folks saw it, and most didn't), it looks like the ability to hop back and forth between two channels is now rolling out more broadly.

Read more
If you don’t see CBS in 4K on YouTube TV, try this
Super Bowl in 4K on CBS on YouTube TV.

A quick heads up if you have the 4K add-on for YouTube TV but aren't seeing the option to watch Super Bowl 2024 in 4K on CBS: It's likely because you're using a custom sort on your live channel listings. (Which is something you might have done if you want to hide YouTube TV channels that you never watch.) That'a bad enough for the game itself, and it also means you won't be able to enjoy the Super Bowl Halftime Show in 4K.

This is a known problem — and has been for years — anytime YouTube TV adds a new channel to the listing. If you're not using the default sort on the live channel listings, a new channel will appear at the bottom of the listings, which is bad enough. But worse is that it's hidden by default until you actively go in and unhide it.

Read more