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YouTube Is Heading For Its Cambridge Analytica Moment (cnbc.com)

Earlier this week, Disney, Nestle and others pulled its advertising spending from YouTube after a blogger detailed how comments on Google's video site were being used to facilitate a "soft-core pedophilia ring." Some of the videos involved ran next to ads placed by Disney and Nestle. With the company facing similar problems over the years, often being "caught in a game of whack-a-mole to fix them," Matt Rosoff from CNBC writes that it's only a matter of time until YouTube faces a scandal that actually alienates users, as happened with Facebook in the Cambridge Analytica scandal. From the report: To be fair, YouTube has taken concrete steps to fix some problems. A couple of years ago, major news events were targets for scammers to post misleading videos about them, like videos claiming shootings such as the one in Parkland, Florida, were staged by crisis actors. In January, the company said it would stop recommending such videos, effectively burying them. It also favors "authoritative" sources in search results around major news events, like mainstream media organizations. And YouTube is not alone in struggling to fight inappropriate content that users upload to its platform. The problem isn't really about YouTube, Facebook or any single company. The problem is the entire business model around user-generated content, and the whack-a-mole game of trying to stay one step ahead of people who abuse it.

[T]ech platforms that rely on user-generated content are protected by the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which says platform providers cannot be held liable for material users post on them. It made sense at the time -- the internet was young, and forcing start-ups to monitor their comments sections (remember comments sections?) would have exploded their expenses and stopped growth before it started. Even now, when some of these companies are worth hundreds of billions of dollars, holding them liable for user-generated content would blow up these companies' business models. They'd disappear, reduce services or have to charge fees for them. Voters might not be happy if Facebook went out of business or they suddenly had to start paying $20 a month to use YouTube. Similarly, advertiser boycotts tend to be short-lived -- advertisers go where they get the best return on their investment, and as long as billions of people keep watching YouTube videos, they'll keep advertising on the platform. So the only way things will change is if users get turned off so badly that they tune out.
Following Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal, people deleted their accounts, Facebook's growth largely stalled in the U.S., and more young users have abandoned the platform. "YouTube has so far skated free of any similar scandals. But people are paying closer attention than ever before, and it's only a matter of time before the big scandal that actually starts driving users away," writes Rosoff.

4 of 100 comments (clear)

  1. IMDB by Kyr+Arvin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    IMDB removed their comments sections entirely rather than police them.

    Youtube's comments are more integral to the service, but if Youtube is going to be have to do more about them then respond to user complaints, they might find it easier to just shut that crap down preemptively.

    1. Re: IMDB by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Potential solution: allow people to submit comments, but the comments donâ(TM)t become publicly visible unless/until the videoâ(TM)s owner approves them.

      (Yes, this would drastically reduce both the number of comments and the incentive to comment. I think that would be a good thing)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    2. Re:IMDB by epine · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A complete shutdown of comments solves the problem, and, harms no one (except the egomaniacs who need a thousand comments telling them how great they are).

      Glad to see you're hot on the job of speaking for all humanity.

      Surprise, surprise: I completely disagree with you. I find the comments almost indispensable. And my ego has nothing to do with it.

      Without the comments, the "like" button becomes effectively castrated, because you have no way to double check what ridiculous reasons people are coming up with to vote one way or another. I'm highly invested in sociology. Society is crumbling. You can't reassemble an egg without getting you's hands dirty; you can't perfect your listening skills inside a tame filter bubble.

      Finally, I don't see any parallel between Facebook and YouTube. Facebook went far above and beyond the call the duty in being obtuse to reality.

      Why Zuckerberg's 14-Year Apology Tour Hasn't Fixed Facebook — April 2018

      Apart from copyright law, YouTube is in the same nasty social media hot tub as every other social media service, and not doing a particularly worse job of it. In terms of getting in between the creative class and their revenue streams, how is this different from Apple? They're different models, but with more or less the same end result: content is not king.

      Being annoyed about the content situation, then trying to throw YouTube under the Facebook bus in a fit of pique won't change this reality one bit.

  2. Re:"soft-core pedophilia ring." by ffkom · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Do you realize this is about completely mundane videos of children in everyday activities, with the only thing related to "pedophilia" being the claim that it was pedophiles who left idiotic comments that suggest parts of these videos were somehow arousing sexual feelings?

    While theoretically, extremely stupid pedophiles might actually have been the authors of those comments, it seems just as likely that trolls seeking attention for either fun or publicity or money wrote those comments themselves to then base a "scandal" on them.