YouTube Executives Ignored Warnings, Letting Toxic Videos Run Rampant
Source: Bloomberg
YouTube Executives Ignored Warnings, Letting Toxic Videos Run Rampant
Proposals to change recommendations and curb conspiracies were sacrificed for engagement, staff say.
By Mark Bergen
April 2, 2019, 5:00 AM EDT Updated on April 2, 2019, 11:29 AM EDT
A year ago, Susan Wojcicki was on stage to defend YouTube. Her company, hammered for months for fueling falsehoods online, was reeling from another flare-up involving a conspiracy theory video about the Parkland, Florida high school shooting that suggested the victims were crisis actors.
Wojcicki, YouTubes chief executive officer, is a reluctant public ambassador, but she was in Austin at the South by Southwest conference to unveil a solution that she hoped would help quell conspiracy theories: a tiny text box from websites like Wikipedia that would sit below videos that questioned well-established facts like the moon landing and link viewers to the truth.
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The conundrum isnt just that videos questioning the moon landing or the efficacy of vaccines are on YouTube. The massive library, generated by users with little editorial oversight, is bound to have untrue nonsense. Instead, YouTubes problem is that it allows the nonsense to flourish. And, in some cases, through its powerful artificial intelligence system, it even provides the fuel that lets it spread.
Wojcicki and her deputies know this. In recent years, scores of people inside YouTube and Google, its owner, raised concerns about the mass of false, incendiary and toxic content that the worlds largest video site surfaced and spread. One employee wanted to flag troubling videos, which fell just short of the hate speech rules, and stop recommending them to viewers. Another wanted to track these videos in a spreadsheet to chart their popularity. A third, fretful of the spread of alt-right video bloggers, created an internal vertical that showed just how popular they were. Each time they got the same basic response: Dont rock the boat.
The company spent years chasing one business goal above others: Engagement, a measure of the views, time spent and interactions with online videos. Conversations with over twenty people who work at, or recently left, YouTube reveal a corporate leadership unable or unwilling to act on these internal alarms for fear of throttling engagement.
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Read more: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-04-02/youtube-executives-ignored-warnings-letting-toxic-videos-run-rampant
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Related: YouTube reportedly floated a proposal that would have made Alex Jones among its highest-paid stars (CNBC)