this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2025
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It absolutely does...
It's called latency or ping. There's relays and routers that pass data where it needs to go. Everything in between the request device and the supply device adds to it. Furthermore, data is still a physical object that requires time to travel. The longer the distance, the more time it takes to get where it's going. That's simple physics.
latency and ping has absolutely nothing to do with video quality. the quality as it's received by the client is going to be the exact same. You're not losing data in the process. it's not like a container ship that's traveling across the ocean and for every 100 miles it travels it loses a container. If you're getting buffering then sure, maybe you're calling that 'quality' but it absolutely is not what anyone else means when they say quality.