I use a script to read the feed which then checks every video against <a href="https://www.youtube.com/shorts/VIDEO_ID" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/shorts/VIDEO_ID</a>. If it loads (200), it's a Short.<p>Stupid, but it works.
> Access to feeds from this network are restricted due to continued abuse of the service, which brings down the performance of feeds for everyone else. You'll need to use a verification token or use a different network to restore access<p>Ahh, good to know that my regular ISP got banned for something I have no clue about. Can't even read the blog.
> Nobody asked for shorts in their feed<p>This has been a big issue for me. I currently use RSS exclusively to view the YouTube channels that I'm subscribed to -- currently about 75 channels (and 27 nebula channels) -- and over half of my YouTube feeds are filled with several shorts (sometimes multiple ones by the same creator per day).<p>Looking for hashtags in the title and marking those videos as read is essentially muscle memory at this point.
Unfortunately, navigating to this page seems to display:<p>> Too many requests are being made from an unsupported application. This unfortunately degrades the experience and makes feeds slow for everyone else. Please try back later.
I've been having some success by configuring my RSS reader with simple rules, like "please don't tell me about shorts" and "I don't care if this person is live right now." Too bad the real homepage shows three enormous thumbnails and pretty much exclusively the things I want to not see.
It's been pretty obvious for a long time that Youtube doesn't want you to have an objective view of anything. It wants you to trust in the Algorithm to spoonfeed you content. Even the subscription page now displays some arbitrary shit first. I'm absolutely sick of it.
This happens regularly, for a few hours every day.
Shorts ruined the YouTube feeds.