Here are some things I learned when I used a GoPro for a few trips a few years ago. The camera really needs to be able to be rotated side to side. After all, all the good scenery is to the sides of the highway! It needs to be high enough to see over the jersey barriers along the road, otherwise you see a lot of concrete in the lower portion of the image. I fixed up a mechanical control on mine so I could rotate it, but it didn't work real well.
You have to be judicious in what you record. Most of what we see while riding gets to be monotonous to the viewer of the video after a few minutes. A final video should probably be no longer than about 15 to 20 minutes, and the subject needs to change at least as often as about every minute.
Editing a video to make it enjoyable for the viewer takes a LOT, I repeat, a LOT, of time. It's also computer processor intensive so a powerful computer is a must. IMO, what GoPro has done is return us to the days of the old 8 mm home movies of 70 years ago. Remember them, and how boring it was to watch a squad of kids racing around the back yard, and watching a panning view of all the aunts and uncles who would turn their heads, or stick their tongue out, and what not? Videos can be entertaining, informative, and enjoyable to watch, IF they are edited to become that way.
All of the above is why I haven't mounted a GoPro on my Spyder in several years, although I seriously planned to. I even bought some stepping motors and such to be able to control the movement of my camera while riding. But I've concluded the best way to avoid boring folks with boring videos was just not record them in the first place!