YouTube says computers are catching problem videos
In December, Google said it was hiring 10,000 people in 2018 to address policy violations across its platforms. The vast majority of videos removed from YouTube toward the end of last year for violating the site's content guidelines had first been detected by machines instead of humans, the Google-owned company said. YouTube said it took down 8.28 million videos during the fourth quarter of 2017, and about 80 per cent of those videos had initially been flagged by artificially intelligent computer systems. The new data highlighted the significant role machines, not just users, government agencies and other organisations, were taking in policing the service as it faced increased scrutiny over the spread of conspiracy videos, fake news and violent content from extremist organisations. Those videos are sometimes promoted by YouTube's recommendation system and unknowingly financed by advertisers, whose ads are placed next to them through an automated system.
Apr-24-2018, 21:16:02 GMT