@askvenice Competitors: 5 Channels Similar to AskVenice Compared
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@askvenice (3,430 subs, 57 videos) sits in an unusual spot — they're a brand channel for a privacy-first AI platform, not a creator channel. Their closest YouTube neighbors by algorithm are @MarksTechVlogs (6,170 subs) and @JOHNNYJAM504 (4,250 subs), though actual audience overlap is thinner than the sub counts suggest.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @askvenice
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
@askvenice is a brand channel — the YouTube presence for Venice, an AI platform — and that changes how to read this competitor set. Brand channels usually compete with other brand channels in their category, but the algorithm here surfaces a weird mix: a UK smart home reviewer, a Japan-based digital nomad making AI music, a UAE education channel, and a Chinese drama channel. The link isn't topic — it's the small-channel zone they all share. So treat this less as 'five direct rivals' and more as 'five channels YouTube sometimes shows alongside askvenice, for reasons that vary.' Let's go one by one.
@MarksTechVlogs (6,170 subs, 544 videos, UK) is the closest thing to a thematic match here, and even that's a stretch. Mark covers smart home tech — bulbs, plugs, speakers, voice assistants — and at 544 videos for 6,170 subs, he's been at this for years. The overlap with askvenice is loose: 'people interested in consumer tech.' But Mark's audience wants product reviews; askvenice's audience wants AI infrastructure. The honest read is that someone subscribed to MarksTechVlogs is in market for buying gadgets, and someone subscribed to askvenice is in market for AI services. Follow Mark if you want hands-on home tech, not if you came for privacy-AI takes.
@msbplus (1,720 subs, 2,800 videos, US) has a wild ratio — 2,800 videos and only 1,720 subs, which is roughly 0.6 subs per video. That usually signals very short-form content or low-effort uploads at high volume. msbplus covers studying, lifestyle, fitness, productivity — pure self-improvement adjacent. There's no real topical overlap with askvenice's privacy-AI angle, but my guess is the algorithm pairs them because both nominally target a 'knowledge worker' audience. Follow msbplus if you want general productivity content; skip if you came here for AI platform comparisons.
@JOHNNYJAM504 (4,250 subs, 23,000 videos, Japan) — and yes, 23,000 videos is the right number. Across 4,250 subs that's 0.18 subs per video, basically a flood. He describes himself as a digital nomad making AI music, guitar loops, AI soundscapes, Tokyo vlogs. This is the only competitor in the set with a genuine AI angle, even if it's creative-AI rather than infrastructure-AI. If you watch askvenice for 'how AI gets used in practice,' Johnny is the consumer-creative side of that same coin. Worth a follow purely for that contrast — and worth studying as a case study in high-volume, low-conversion uploading.
@PROFESSORANJUMRAZAKHAN (3,970 subs, 806 videos, UAE) is an academic channel — accounting and business courses for Punjab University students and ACCA candidates. Very specific audience, 806 videos shipped, decent conversion at roughly 5 subs per video. There's effectively zero topical overlap with askvenice; this pairing is almost certainly the algorithm grouping small channels with serious tonal cues. Not a competitor in any meaningful sense. I'd mention it only because it's in the data, but a creator scouting the AI tools niche should skip past this one without slowing down.
@cdramaqingbao (3,160 subs, 466 videos) is Chinese drama recap content — country unlisted, description literally just 'More about this channel.' Like the professor channel, this is a non-match: different audience, different language, different intent. The 466 videos to 3,160 subs ratio (~7 subs per video) suggests a niche fandom channel that converts slowly but steadily. Useful mainly as a reminder that algorithmic 'similar channels' lists get noisy at sub counts under 10K. The smaller you are, the more random your neighbors look.
if you actually watch @askvenice and want more in that lane, you'll get more from following AI-platform brand channels directly — Anthropic, OpenAI, smaller privacy-focused players — than from chasing this YouTube-suggested list. Out of the five here, only @JOHNNYJAM504 has any real AI overlap, and even that's creative tools rather than infrastructure. The other four are interesting reads on small-channel content strategy, but they're not askvenice's actual competitive set. Worth knowing that going in.
Common questions
Who are @askvenice's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Honestly, on YouTube specifically, @askvenice doesn't have clean direct competitors — they're the brand channel for Venice, a privacy-first AI platform, and most of their actual rivals (Anthropic, smaller AI tool brands) compete in the product market, not the YouTube algorithm. Among the channels YouTube algorithmically pairs with them, @MarksTechVlogs (6,170 subs) is the most topically adjacent thanks to a consumer tech focus, and @JOHNNYJAM504 (4,250 subs) is the only one with real AI content overlap. The rest of the set — @msbplus, @PROFESSORANJUMRAZAKHAN, @cdramaqingbao — is mostly algorithmic noise from sharing the small-channel zone.
How does @askvenice compare to @MarksTechVlogs?
They barely compare. @MarksTechVlogs (6,170 subs, 544 videos) is a UK-based independent reviewer covering smart home gear — Apple Home, bulbs, plugs, speakers. @askvenice (3,430 subs, 57 videos) is a brand channel marketing an AI platform. Mark's audience is in market for hardware purchases; askvenice's audience is in market for AI services. The interesting stat: askvenice has roughly 60 subs per video against Mark's 11, which means despite being the smaller channel, they're more efficient per upload — partly because brand channels carry intent from off-platform traffic that solo creators don't have.
What channels should I watch alongside @askvenice?
If you genuinely care about the privacy-AI angle, the watch-alongside list isn't really inside this competitor set — it's stuff like AI Explained, Two Minute Papers, or vendor channels for Anthropic, Mistral, and similar players. From the algorithmic neighbor set you've been given, the only one I'd actually queue up is @JOHNNYJAM504 (4,250 subs), since his hands-on dives into AI music tools are at least topically adjacent. @MarksTechVlogs is fine as a secondary follow if you also like consumer tech reviews, but it's a different audience. The other three aren't relevant to askvenice's lane.
Is @askvenice the biggest channel in their niche?
No. At 3,430 subs, @askvenice is actually one of the smaller channels in this five-channel comparison — @MarksTechVlogs has 6,170 and @JOHNNYJAM504 has 4,250. But sub count isn't really the right metric here. askvenice has 57 videos to MarksTechVlogs' 544 and Johnny's 23,000, so on a subs-per-video basis they're far more efficient. That's typical of brand channels, where YouTube subs are downstream of product growth, not the other way around. Venice claims 3M+ platform users; the YouTube channel is a small slice of that audience.
What's the difference between @askvenice and similar creators?
The biggest difference is that @askvenice is a brand channel and most 'similar' creators here are independent or solo. @MarksTechVlogs is one guy reviewing smart home gear. @JOHNNYJAM504 is a digital nomad uploading at insane volume (23,000 videos for 4,250 subs). @msbplus pushes high-frequency lifestyle content. @askvenice's incentive structure is fundamentally different — the goal is platform sign-ups, so upload cadence is slower and more deliberate (57 videos total). They don't need viral hits, they need viewers who convert to product users. That changes everything about how to read the channel and its growth pattern.
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