EDIT: I agree with the majority! I'll use this to attempt to convince the powers that be to improve the situation in some way, as best I can. Thanks folks!

Does autoplay of a muted video in the background of a website bother you? Like as a decorative/design element behind the content.

If yes, let me know the effect it has and how it makes you feel (in the moment, about the website, about the company, etc)

Answer honestly (idk why you wouldn't but I feel compelled to say that)

:boosts_appreciated: boost so I can get more data pls

  • Yes, autoplay bothers me in this case (95%, 553 votes)
  • No, I don't notice in this case (4%, 27 votes)
580 voters. Poll end: Friday, May 22, 2026, 8:21 PM

This entry was edited (Wednesday, May 20, 2026, 6:13 PM)

reshared this

in reply to dyani 🫠

@dyani 🫠 My server doesn't support polls so I can't vote, but I'll comment. I use older devices. The web is already so bloated that it frequently brings my browser to its knees. Video is usually unnecessarily burdensome on older hardware when it's already juggling so many other things.

I don't mind it being there, but let me decide if I want to play it.

in reply to Brooke Vibber

@brooke Right, when I started my own reply, I was thinking of bandwidth as well as distraction. Then I myself got distracted researching just where motion detection starts (in the retinas, like I'd thought) and forgot about the bandwidth issue. (And also ran out of characters.)

Anyway, yes, it wastes bandwidth in addition to the distraction! Thank you for reminding me.

in reply to dyani 🫠

My pet peeve regarding website video seems to be the little box of a video that you never started nor want to pay attention to, that follows you as you scroll down the article.

If I had started the video and it decides to follow me around it's not a problem.

----

That said (reading some comments made me understand the original idea better) animations are generally distracting and having like a short video clip just for the sake of making the site feel "alive" is not a good idea imo.

This entry was edited (Tuesday, May 19, 2026, 4:06 PM)
in reply to dyani 🫠

it's a very quick shorthand to communicate "I don't care about your internet bandwidth or your attention self-moderation. It's about what *I*, John Q. Website, want."

It's the easiest thing in the world to wait for a cue that the user specifically wants the video to play, and the website *knows* they don't have that consent, or they wouldn't have muted it. They know. So it's about seeing how far they can push boundary they're aware of.

in reply to dyani 🫠

It doesn't really bother me personally if it's purely aesthetic (attention-grabbing popover bullshit is another story), but if I were going to do it I would be aware of the fact that it *would* bother plenty of folks. So if I were doing it for some reason I'd at least gate it behind a check for whether the user has the prefers reduced motion setting in their browser.
in reply to dyani 🫠

I find it distracting, like with anything else that is at the edge of my perception trying to get my attention and that I haven’t activated, when I’m trying to do something.

In the case of video it also kind of shows a disregard for my situation. I could be under a phone data plan that I didn’t want to waste on random video streams. @sindarina

in reply to dyani 🫠

How it makes me feel in the moment varies.

If I am okay health wise, and at my computer, I am annoyed, since I have video play turned off in my browser.

If I have a migraine, it may mean I have to go lay down in a dark room instead of at least reading.

On my ipad is worse. I often use my ipad in the dining room, and I don' know what that video is, and don't want other people to see it thinking I approve of it. (Sorry too many in game ads have been XXX rated lately).

I have often left sites if they have a video, especially if the video pops out and follows the mouse around the screen.

Unless I am on a physical therapy site, or YouTube, I am almost never looking for video.

Ten degrees of vision, hearing loss, and migraines do that to you.

in reply to dyani 🫠

Muted is better than not muted (looking at you, news websites) but unless you're a video site and I went looking, autoplay is still bad manners.

I find it annoying at best, distracting and frustrating at worst, like the site owner feels they have to rattle something shiny at me instead of allowing me to focus on the text block I came for.

If I can't close the autoplay video or make it stop, I have been known to either leave and find the information elsewhere, or locate its DOM element and block it programatically.

in reply to dyani 🫠

it's annoying because it's distracting. I find it to be disrespectful to how my attention works. It being deliberate makes this worse: the actual content I'm there for, is secondary to the engagement the website is trying to have with me... which isn't anywhere close to the engagement I'm trying to have with the website.
in reply to dyani 🫠

Yes, it bothers me because there's *motion happening*. Our eyes are literally hardwired to detect motion (like, there are cells *in the retina* that detect motion before the impulses even make it to the brain!). That makes motion very difficult to ignore.

If I wanted to watch a video, I'd have clicked on something that looked like a play button. If I didn't do that, I don't want the site playing video. It pisses me off, and if I can't make it stop, I'll just leave.

in reply to dyani 🫠

frustrated, annoyed, Yet Another Thing that I want to turn off but cannot.

I would avoid the website unless forced.

The only exception that I've come across are well designed pixel gif loops in a background, where the movement is limited to usually a corner of the screen, maybe some things like a shooting star rarely, and not distracting, just fun. Doesn't have to be pixel art specifically but that's what it mostly is.

But specifically muted videos have never been a good experience. I also get frustrated that I have been loading /that/ on my machine. Sometimes it lags the entire webpage, too.

in reply to dyani 🫠

@stephaniepixie

i usually immediately close the page. Elements like that are viscerally uncomfortable to me - they're intensely distracting; they make it fucking impossible to concentrate on the actual content; and I feel great resentment towards the company and the designer for having inflicted this on me when I was just trying to access information that I, presumably, needed.

It's a huge insult to anyone with adhd or on a low-bandwidth connection.

in reply to dyani 🫠

yes, it bothers me quite a bit. In brief:

  • I find it visually distracting
  • It consumes bandwidth, often enough to make the page load painfully slowly
  • If I am on a metered connection (e.g. mobile data), it consumes my data to load something I don't want
  • If I cannot make it stop, it feels like a violation of consent
  • For all these reasons, I am immediately frustrated if I encounter autoplaying video of any kind, and most often close the page and don't attempt to view it again
in reply to dyani 🫠

Such autoplay videos makes it basically impossible for me to use the website. Best case scenario (from website point of view) is that I get very annoyed and find a way to stop the video. Worst case (common) is that I just close the page right away.

My browser is set up to tell the website that I don’t like/deal well with motion (via the CSS reduce motion property) so there is no excuse for that kind of behaviour.

PS I consider it a severe accessibility problem with such videos.

in reply to dyani 🫠

When I visit a "regular" website (not a video platform), I expect the front page to be mostly text and still images, possibly orienting me towards videos on other pages. I expect to have some text to read. Having a video automatically play in the background, even muted, is very distracting and is likely to make me lose focus and therefore lose interest in the website.
in reply to dyani 🫠

I actively despise anything animating in websites. Marquee may be the maximum I'll tolerate but preferably not. I will edit your DOM to remove whatever animating crap you add. If it's too much I'll declare your website toxic waste and never try to visit it, and recommend others to not use it either.
in reply to dyani 🫠

Absolutely intolerable, and I immediately leave the site

Like most people on this planet, I access the internet on a device with minimal computational power, on a network with minimal bandwidth

My computer can simply can't handle playing a background audio or video file and also scroll smoothly or handle clicks on the web page

I also might be trying to view the page in an environment where flickering light or sound would bother other people or critters. Or me

And, the biggest reason of all: It's consent violation

This entry was edited (Tuesday, May 19, 2026, 9:49 PM)
in reply to dyani 🫠

yes it bothers me because (as far as I know) even small movement like a video playing will negate lots of power saving features. So it will keep the CPU and or GPU busy and eat battery slash power while it's visible. Plus accessibility concerns

I usually make freakishly barren web pages for print-friendliness. My worst pages look like income tax forms, but they load fast and run great

Oh! Also, since video is Big, a background video will either waste your server's bandwidth, or 🧵

in reply to dyani 🫠

echoing the many sentiments here of feeling distracted, wasting bandwidth, wasting system resources. i generally wish the web was more plaintext overall; so much can be conveyed with so little, and things begin to feel like they’ve lost direction quickly. a lack of conviction. and all of that adds up to feeling disrespected, and like i’ve entered a space where the owners, the people responsible have no real vision for what the space should be.
in reply to dyani 🫠

Absolutely not bothered unless it is an advertisement. Also, sometimes I’m okay with audio at the same time as I scroll. It just needs to smoothly mute/unmute as one video is out of frame and another is in.

In a perfect world, the autoplay will have subtitles so I can read some content without having to unmute.

Anyone complaining should just be directed to tuning their browser settings to ignore autoplay.

in reply to dyani 🫠

It's distracting, and it makes me think that the website's owner cares more about making the site look like it has a high production value than about efficient communication. Unless the website has a specifically artistic purpose (e.g. it's an in-browser video game or a humor site or something), I generally am accessing the site with a specific purpose in mind, e.g. looking for particular pieces of information or filling out a form. A background video does nothing but distract me and possibly slow the page's load time.

I feel similarly about that thing some news sites started doing a few years ago, where scrolling down on a long form news article plays an animation rather than actually scrolling. It feels like a gimmick that just disorients me and makes it hard to "find my place" again if I have to pause reading and come back to it later. (Here's an example of what I mean from The Onion: theonion.com/the-best-books-to…)

in reply to dyani 🫠

even muted, this uses a ton of extra system resources, slows the whole browser down, and generally disrupts the operation of the site. autoplay on the web, in any form, is inextricably linked to a history of abuse, scams, spam, ads, and other toxic content. no responsible site creator would want their work linked to this, and it smacks of corpo scum who think they know better than the user.
in reply to dyani 🫠

I honestly hate it because if I visit a website for written content, I don't want to be bothered by a video (muted or otherwise). I use extensions to block this garbage...It tells me a lot about sites that choose to try to evade my blocking software.

That they are SEOmaxxing peeps who don't care about my desires, CPU, or bandwidth. They want to grow into a massive digital presence to snuff out any competition. Its nasty behavior.

in reply to dyani 🫠

I regard it the same way I regard in-game ads that don't default to muted. More often than not, I'm in a public place when I'm scrolling (or gaming) on my phone, and I don't like disturbing those around me with sudden, unexpected blasts of noise, especially in the restroom.

Also, for the record (and PLEASE pass this along to others in charge of such things), I consider videos/ads that cannot actually be muted as a hate crime.

in reply to dyani 🫠

So, when I notice a video is playing, muted, I have to do two things if its some content I want to see - I have to unmute AND rewind. I see this so often on news sites where I am more often than not visiting specifically to see the video.

If its just some design element, then it is entirely a distraction from actually reading the content. Especially if its playing behind the content in some way to make the content difficult to read.

in reply to dyani 🫠

having spent months at a time in countries where data is incredibly expensive and also very meagre it makes me want to: scream, pull hair, break bones, vomit, find the perpetrator and punish them slowly, painfully and with disgusting infections. It shows a total disrespect for anyone who doesn't have privilege, which shows that the designer is a nasty turd. YMMV
in reply to dyani 🫠

if something on a page moves without me initiating it, then I'm highly likely to just close that window and never come back. I will probably never think highly of that organisation again.

Anyone not respecting a user's "prefers-reduced-motion" preferences when present these days is making a deliberate choice.

in reply to dyani 🫠

it bothers me when I'm using an #epaper screen, because that doesn't handle videos well. (But then, it also doesn't handle certain websites with too much in-between grey)

Not quite what you asked but on a related note, I am bothered by muted autoplaying of regular videos, regardless of which screen I'm on, because of the environmental impact (transmitting so much data, etc.). But if it's just a short loop as a decorative element and I'm on a regular screen I think that'd be fine/fun

in reply to dyani 🫠

I don't think I never not notice moving images…

my parents always have the TV on in their house, and even if it was decidedly something I don't care about, it kept me distracted — and it hasn't changed in the 25 years since moving out of my parents' house

anyway, i think i just got distracted thinking about why get distracted by moving images, so you got a TMI.

in reply to dyani 🫠

Dislike it entirely - website should focus on reading of content and maybe static pictures, nothing should move unless I request it to do so. I definitely think a lot less of any company that does this -- I'll also include animated and moving backgrounds in this judgement.
This entry was edited (Wednesday, May 20, 2026, 7:26 AM)
in reply to dyani 🫠

the visual distraction is a big part of it; also gives the website more of a flavor that spells “the content you came to read isn’t valuable to us”; and then there’s the technical aspect where video might play muted most times but whether it actually is muted gets influenced by so many factors out of the user’s control - it’s gonna blare some time.

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