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YouTube ID for MarkRober

Public profile data resolved from the source platform — numeric user ID, avatar and stats. Cached for 30 days — one lookup serves thousands of visitors.

Supports Facebook, Instagram, Threads, X, YouTube, TikTok, GitHub and Telegram URLs.
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MarkRober
YouTube Valid
Mark Rober

Former NASA engineer. Current CrunchLabs founder and friend of science.

Answers to some common questions:

1) I make a monthly toy we build together on a video, that gets delivered to your house that teaches you to think like an engineer. Check it out at- https://crunchlabs.com
2) I studied Mechanical Engineering in School. I did my undergrad at BYU and Masters at USC.
3) I worked for NASA JPL for 9 years, 7 of which were working on the Curiosity Rover (I made a video about it you should def totes watch cause it's probably my favorite of all my videos). Then I made some Halloween costumes. Then I worked for Apple in their Special Projects Group doing Product Design as a Mechanical Engineer for 5 years. Then in 2022 I created CrunchLabs to deliver monthly toys that teach you to think like an engineer.

77,000,000
Subscribers
255
Videos
16,826,890,851
Views
Username MarkRober
Numeric ID
UCY1kMZp36IQSyNx_9h4mpCg

ABOUT

Joined2011-10-19 00:00:00
LocationUnited States
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YouTube profile: MarkRober

Public profile for MarkRober on YouTube: ID UCY1kMZp36IQSyNx_9h4mpCg, profile picture, and link. IDInfo resolves social profile URLs to platform, username, numeric ID, and avatar. Supported: Facebook, Instagram, Threads, X, YouTube, TikTok, GitHub, Telegram. Data is public only.

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About YouTube

What is YouTube?

YouTube was founded in February 2005 by three former PayPal employees and acquired by Google in November 2006 for $1.65 billion. It is now the second-most-visited website in the world with over 2.5 billion monthly active users.

Unlike most platforms, a YouTube channel ID is not a number — it's a 24-character string that always starts with UC. This format dates back to 2014 when YouTube replaced its old username system. The UC… ID is what every API, RSS feed, and analytics tool keys off.

A short history

How YouTube user IDs evolved

From the very first IDs to today's modern numeric format — here's how the system grew alongside the platform itself.

  1. 2005–2014

    Username-only channels

    In its first decade, YouTube identified channels by their username — URLs looked like youtube.com/user/PewDiePie. There was no separate stable ID.

  2. 2014

    UC… channel IDs introduced

    YouTube rolled out a new identity system: every channel received a permanent 24-character UC-prefixed ID (e.g. UCXuqSBlHAE6Xw-yeJA0Tunw). The "UC" stands for "User Channel" and the remaining 22 characters are a base64-style identifier.

  3. 2017

    Custom URLs (legacy /c/ form)

    YouTube introduced custom URLs (youtube.com/c/LinusTechTips) as a friendlier alias for the UC… ID. Channels needed to meet eligibility criteria to claim one.

  4. 2022

    Custom @handles for everyone

    YouTube launched mandatory @handles in late 2022 — every channel now has a unique @username that doubles as a URL slug. The UC… ID still lives underneath; @handles are just a friendlier alias.

In every lookup

What you get from a YouTube lookup

Every YouTube profile resolved through IDInfo returns these fields, all from public sources.

Permanent UC… channel ID

The stable channel identifier used across YouTube tools, RSS, and analytics.

Channel avatar URL

High-resolution profile image.

Subscriber count

Public subscriber number (rounded as YouTube displays it).

Video count & total views

Lifetime upload count and channel view total.

Why this matters for creators, agencies & devs

Why your YouTube channel ID matters

  • YouTube tools and analytics often need the permanent UC… channel ID instead of the public handle.
  • RSS feeds live at youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UC… — IDInfo gives you the exact ID you need.
  • YouTube Studio analytics & monetization partners (TubeBuddy, VidIQ, Social Blade) all index channels by UC… ID.
  • Embed players & subscribe widgets reference the channel ID, so they survive @handle changes.
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FAQ

YouTube user ID — common questions

What does the "UC" prefix in YouTube channel IDs mean?
UC stands for "User Channel". Every regular YouTube channel's ID starts with UC followed by a 22-character base64-style string. There are also rare prefixes — UU (the channel's uploads playlist), HC (Hangouts), MC (music charts) — but for regular channels it's always UC.
Why do I see /c/, /user/, and /@ URLs on YouTube?
They are all aliases for the same underlying UC… channel ID. /user/ is the legacy 2005-era format, /c/ is the 2017 custom URL, and /@handle is the modern (2022+) format. IDInfo accepts all three.
Can a YouTube channel have multiple UC… IDs?
No. Each channel has exactly one permanent UC… ID. Even if you change your channel name, custom URL, or @handle, the UC… ID never changes.
Why is my channel ID a string instead of a number like other platforms?
YouTube chose a base64-encoded 22-character format (after the UC prefix) to give them a huge namespace in a compact string. Other platforms picked plain integers. Both approaches work — they're just different design choices.

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