Good talk. I did something similar to him and all that happened is everyone was just saying I'm making a lot out of nothing. They're right that each thing was "nothing" but the problem is that this is a non-trivial number of "nothings" happening every day...
Honestly, I think the problem is that it's a Lemon Market[0]. Lemon markets thrive when there is asymmetric information. When a customer cannot tell the difference between a good product (peach) and a bad product (lemon). All it takes is a bunch of tech illiterate people... not sure where we'll find those...
On your video, funny thing. When I was in my PhD I had a very hard time publishing because I was building models that were much smaller, required less data, but got similar performance. Reviewers just looked at the benchmark like "not SOTA? lol". I've seen tons of great papers solving similar problems constantly get rejected. As a reviewer I frequently defended works like that as well as works that had good ideas but just didn't have enough GPU power. It was really telling...
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Market_for_Lemons
[P.S.] A nice solution I found for the pasting problem he mentioned (and in various forms) is that I first paste the text into the url bad or search bar then copy that and then paste. {<c-k>,<c-l>}<c-v><c-a><c-c>. Works 98% of the time every time.