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YouTube Is Fighting Conspiracy Theories With 'Authoritative' Context and Outside Links (theverge.com)

In an effort to reduce misinformation on YouTube, the video-sharing website will be adding "authoritative" context to search results about conspiracy-prone topics, as well as putting $25 million toward news outlets producing videos. YouTube made the announcement today as part of a new step in its Google News Initiative, a journalism-focused program that aims to help publishers earn revenue and combat fake news. The Verge reports: This update includes new features for breaking news updates and long-standing conspiracy theories. YouTube is implementing a change it announced in March, annotating conspiracy-related pages with text from "trusted sources like Wikipedia and Encyclopedia Britannica." And in the hours after a major news event, YouTube will supplement search results with links to news articles, reasoning that rigorous outlets often publish text before producing video.

YouTube is also funding a number of partnerships. It's establishing a working group that will provide input on how it handles news, and it's providing money for "sustainable" video operations across 20 markets across the world, in addition to expanding an internal support team for publishers.

18 of 311 comments (clear)

  1. Why? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sometimes it's fun to watch tinfoil-hat videos... But if you ARE going to try to be "authoritative", please do NOT use fresh news articles, especially about anything political, racial, or climate-based. Many of those have "corrections" issued a few days later, meaning that they were NOT in fact, authoritative. Better to just let it go as-is, and stop trying to hand-hold the viewer. Let people learn when they screw up, and learn the lesson that sometimes you need to check the facts that you hear, and also look at the other side as well to see if it has a better position backed with facts and logic.

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    1. Re:Why? by Moryath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You haven't been around humanity much if you think that people are currently learning when they screw up. Or what's your explanation for the number of inbred tinfoil-hatters who believe sites like Infowars?

    2. Re:Why? by Mashiki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good point. After all there's plenty of inbred tinfoil-hatters that believe sites like media matters, shareblue, and so on too.

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      Om, nomnomnom...
    3. Re:Why? by Moryath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you are trying to compare Media Matters, which is primarily a fact-checking and informational review site, to a conspiracy peddler site like Infowars... well, you're part of the problem. False equivalence ploys by white supremacist conservatives are a common and well observed tactic.

    4. Re:Why? by TigerPlish · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sometimes it's fun to watch tinfoil-hat videos...

      Why? I'll use moon landings as an example. We went there, and we left tons of trash which are proof enough.. never mind the tons of film footage, photographs, experiments

      Apollo, Gemini and Mercury made so many jobs for so many, directly and indirectly.

      It was America's apogee, and after that it's been one long backslide. The moon deniers spit in the face of all that work. And if it's *that* easy to twist the denier's minds, what with all the hard evidence, then how easy is it to twist their minds on subjects with no evidence?

      It's fun at first, then it's just sad. And the weak-minded are an exploitable things... food for thought.

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      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    5. Re:Why? by ma1wrbu5tr · · Score: 1, Insightful

      MediaMatters is the propaganda wing of the Democrat party. They occasionally include facts in their missives but that does not make them "fact checkers".

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      Why can't we go back to using jumpers to configure slot adapter cards? Why? I say!
    6. Re:Why? by penandpaper · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yea, what could possibly go wrong.

    7. Re:Why? by Moryath · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I love how you trot out a book by a white supremacist hack who beat the "benghazi whee" tinfoil hat nonsense to death and derailed her own career by making crap up repeatedly, as your "source".

      But hey, that stuff must sell in the trailer park.

    8. Re:Why? by Mashiki · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So the only thing you have is, nothing. But the only thing you've done for everyone else is to show you're a racist and a bigot, that runs away when the facts become inconvenient.

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      Om, nomnomnom...
    9. Re:Why? by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Our last election, and even current reporting, showed that a lot of people do not learn, and even the ones that do end up learning too late.

      Are you serious?

      You didn't like the results of the last presidential election, so that means that video sites need to festoon any unapproved opinions and information with warnings and links to goodthink?

    10. Re:Why? by Mashiki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You mean bog him down as a troll tactic?

      Skim their post history, they don't believe it's a troll tactic. They simply believe that anyone who disagrees with the progressive agenda in any form are white nationalists. If you want to see the face of extremism, it's right there. And that, is just plain sad.

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      Om, nomnomnom...
    11. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      He also missed that the Trump tax cuts, instead of putting more blacks into poverty, reduced black unemployment to historic record lows.

      We've gotten to the point where the left is screaming against policies that help minorities and are currently running on flipping them back. It appears the left is running on actual white supremacy platforms with policies that are known to hurt blacks and other minorities. I would ask when the DNC became a bunch of black hating racists, but they have a LONG history of it going back to at least the Civil War.

      It appears that Trump helping blacks has gotten the DNC to start being blatent about their racism and promoting policies to hurt blacks like they did in the 60s and 70s. Is Media Matters helping them push racist policies like this? I think so.

    12. Re:Why? by Moryath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let me get this straight. An article about a monetary donation to a fact checking site and two opinion articles, and you're too media illiterate to check the bylines?

      I'd laugh if it weren't so sad.

    13. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      You obviously never watched any of the footage with a critical eye. It may have passed muster on a 13 inch black and white tv 40 years ago, but you look at it today and it's practically silly.

      In one video astronaughts plod along, in another they can jump 6 feet in the air. Watch videos of the space-station and they spend half their time telling you how incredibly careful you have to be because the slightest bump can damage a suit, etc. But the moon videos have people 4-wheeling dune buggies.

      The ISS videos are even goofier. People with their hair sprayed/gelled into "floating" shapes, plainly visible harnesses, obvious green screen causing things to disappear at they move off-screen (but are still in the shot).

      Of course non of this is proof that we didn't go to the moon, or have an ISS. It's just proof that the videos are fake propoganda.

  2. Please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Could you also eliminate fails videos and the 'you won't believe this trick' shit? Who the fuck is making all of these fake videos?

    Frankly, it would be great is Youtube scrapped the recommendations all together. They suck balls.

  3. This isn't going to help the way they want it to by H3lldr0p · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem is that you have to have trust in the authoritative sources and the first thing the vast majority of the conspiracy peddlars do is to throw massive amounts of doubt upon said sources. This quickly devolves into a one side versus the other argument that authoritative sources almost never win.

    It comes down to how you cannot reason someone out of a idea they didn't arrive at through reason in the first place.

  4. Re:This isn't going to help the way they want it t by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This quickly devolves into a one side versus the other argument that authoritative sources almost never win.

    Depends on what you mean by "win". If by "win" you mean that the conspiracy theorists are convinced of the error of their ways, yeah, that's not going to happen. But if you mean that you'll prevent a significant number of visitors who would otherwise get sucked into the weirdness from getting sucked in, that seems much more feasible.

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  5. Supposed to cite sources in Wikipedia by raymorris · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Aside from that, Wikipedia authors are supposed to cite reliable sources in the articles. Why? Because Wikipedia itself isn't a reliable source, it's only roughly as reliable as the sources it cites (or doesn't).

    That said, on most topics it ends up being pretty good.