The threats to privacy with YouTube are different from PeerTube's. In YouTube's case, the platform gathers a huge amount of your personal information (not only your IP) to analyze them and track you. Moreover, YouTube is owned by Google/Alphabet, a company that tracks you across many websites (via AdSense or Google Analytics).
We recommend you to not use the <x id="START_TAG_STRONG" ctype="x-strong" equiv-text="<strong>"/>root<x id="CLOSE_TAG_STRONG" ctype="x-strong" equiv-text="</strong> "/> user to publish your videos, since it's the super-admin account of your instance. <x id="LINE_BREAK" ctype="lb" equiv-text="<br />"/> Instead, <x id="START_LINK" ctype="x-a" equiv-text="<a routerLink="/admin/users">"/>create a dedicated account<x id="CLOSE_LINK" ctype="x-a" equiv-text="</a> "/> to upload your videos.
Your IP address is public so every time you consult a website, there is a number of actors (in addition to the final website) seeing your IP in their connection logs: ISP/routers/trackers/CDN and more. PeerTube is transparent about it: we warn you that if you want to keep your IP private, you must use a VPN or Tor Browser. Thinking that removing P2P from PeerTube will give you back anonymity doesn't make sense.
PeerTube wants to deliver the best countermeasures possible, to give you more choice and render attacks less likely. Here is what we put in place so far:
Max live duration is <x id="INTERPOLATION" equiv-text="{{ getMaxLiveDuration() | myDurationFormatter }}"/>. If your live reaches this limit, it will be automatically terminated.