In a recent appearance by YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki at the South
by Southwest Festival, she suggested that YouTube is countering the
conspiracy-related videos that have been spreading like wildfire on the
platform — including videos telling viewers that high school senior and Parkland , Fl. survivor David Hogg is an actor.
Specifically,
Wojcicki outlined YouTube’s plans to add “information cues,” including links to
Wikipedia pages that debunk garbage content for viewers if they choose to learn
more. (Somewhat strangely, no one had told Wikipedia about this plan.)
Either
way, the platform is going to have do much better than that, suggests a new
Business Insider report that says YouTube Kids has a huge problem with
conspiracy videos, too. To wit, the three-year-old, ostensibly kid-friendly
version of YouTube is showing its young viewers videos that preach the
nonsensical, including “that the world is flat, that the moon landing was faked,
and that the planet is ruled by reptile-human hybrids,” according to BI’s own
first-hand findings.
In fact,
when BI searched for “UFO” on YouTube Kids, one of the top videos to appear was
a nearly five-hour-long lecture by professional conspiracy theorist David
Icke, who covers everything in the clip from “reptile human bloodlines,” to the
Freemasons, who he credits with building the Statue of Liberty, Las Vegas,
Christianity, and Islam, among other things. (The Freemasons also killed
President John Kennedy, he tells viewers.).
Business
Insider says YouTube removed the videos from YouTube Kids after its editorial
team contacted the company. YouTube also issued the following
statement: “The YouTube Kids app is home to a wide variety of content that
includes enriching and entertaining videos for families. This content is
screened using human trained systems. That being said, no system is perfect and
sometimes we miss the mark. When we do, we take immediate action to block the
videos or, as necessary, channels from appearing in the app. We will continue
to work to improve the YouTube Kids app experience.”
That’s not
going to be good enough for parents who are paying attention. Hunter Walk, a
venture capitalist who previously led product at YouTube and has a young
daughter, may have summed it up best in a tweet that he published earlier
this afternoon, writing that “when you create and market an app to kids, the
level of care and custodial responsibility you need to take is 100x usual.
Clean it up or shut it down pls.”
YouTube
has been reluctant to tinker with is recommendation algorithm because its “main
objective is to keep you consuming YouTube videos for as long as possible”
Wired noted this past week. (Crazy theories are apparently quite sticky).
Wired also reported that despite a recent uproar about all the conspiracy
theory content, YouTube still doesn’t have clear rules around when whether
these videos violate its community guidelines, which cover bullying, hate
speech, graphic violence, and sexually explicit content.
Wojcicki
said during her festival appearance that “People can still watch the videos,
but then they have access to additional information.”
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