He or she is from North Korea and has a video that lasts over a million hours. Wait, are those three extra zer or [music] did YouTube officially stop working? A million hours is roughly 140 years.
That is what it says on the thumbnail. That is what it says in the description. [music] But as soon as you click, the video is only a bit over 12 hours long.
Another glitch. What does this person know about YouTube that the rest of us [music] do not? How is this even possible?
And the craziest part, how is [music] this possible from a country where the internet is one of the most strictly regulated things on the planet? Is someone actually checking in from Pyongyang or is this just top tier algorithm trolling? And then the shorts, we all know they are limited to 3 minutes, but Shinna, he has a short that is 150 hours [music] long.
What is this? With only three uploaded videos in just 6 days, he gained over 70,000 subscribers. Has YouTube already approved monetization for him?
Is Shinni a hacker? Or did he simply find bugs that no one else sees? First, let us solve the mystery.
How do you even upload a video longer than 12 hours? One ex [music] user, Andre Pashensev, shared an interesting theory. He claims the trick is in deliberately interrupting the upload.
According to him, you upload the video to 95%, [music] then simply close the page, so the system chokes. After a 24-hour pause, you resume the upload, and YouTube supposedly sends [music] it through processing without any limits. Andre says the system has become so massive and sluggish that it is full of these kinds of holes.
He also posted a sentence that only made things more mysterious. [music] Why are my videos being recommended to people? This channel was supposed to be a secret.
Is this a genius marketing plan? Or was Shiny WR really testing the limits of YouTube, thinking no one would notice? Shiny WR did not stop at breaking the video timer.
Three months ago, he posted something that literally challenged his audience with the sentence, "Viewer posts are enabled, but you cannot post anything. " Try and for real, until just a few days ago, no one could leave a comment or reply to that post. Shiny WR somehow managed to lock interaction in a way that [music] regular users do not have access to.
It was yet another proof that he does not use YouTube like the [music] rest of us. He uses it as his personal playground for bug testing. The weirdest part, suddenly, as if on command, the algorithm pushed that post into public view, and people were finally able to comment.
One user wrote, "Interesting how this was posted a few months ago, yet we all saw it only today. " while summarizing his sudden popularity with this guy hacked the algorithm. And here is the wildest detail that everyone keeps missing.
That corrupted Arabic line, the one that shows up as broken symbols on screen, that is not random. It appears right there in a description of his most viewed video. Exactly like this.
When decoded properly, the original Arabic line says, "Come meet me in hell. " So, we have a North Korean mystery user glitching the upload system, breaking shorts limits, locking community posts, and casually leaving corrupted messages that decode into edgy phrases. Is that just chaotic humor or a signature?
[music] Because that exact corrupted line sits publicly in the description of his most viral upload, untouched, unedited, and seen by over a million people. In the end, the question remains, who [music] is actually shiny were? Is it a kid from Pyongyang who found a way to bypass [music] the national firewall and play with Google's code at the same time?
or is it an experienced developer showing us how fragile a billiondoll platform really is? Whatever the truth is, [music] one thing is certain. The YouTube system just got a worthy opponent.
What do you think about all of this? Write it down in the comments and I will see you in the next video.