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YouTube Removes 1.9 Mn Videos For Rule Violations In India


New Delhi: Google-owned YouTube removed more than 1.9 million videos from its platform in India between January and March 2023 for violating ‘YouTube’s Community Guidelines’. Globally, the video-streaming giant removed over 6.48 million videos for rule violations.

The company removed more than 8.7 million channels in the same period that were terminated for violating YouTube’s spam policies, including but not restricted to scams, misleading metadata or thumbnails, and video and comments spam. (Also Read: Jio vs Airtel Monthly Fiber Plans: A Comprehensive Comparison Of Price, Speed, Data, OTT Offerings, And Additional Benefits)

It also took down over 853 million comments, of which the majority were spam. Over 99 percent of removed comments were detected automatically. (Also Read: 8 Alternative Methods For ATM Cash Withdrawal Without A Debit Card)

“Over the years, we’ve invested heavily in the policies and products needed to protect the YouTube community. Today, the vast majority of creators upload content in good faith and don’t violate our policies and we believe educational efforts are successful at reducing the number of creators who unintentionally violate our policies,” YouTube said on Wednesday.

According to the company, more than 93 percent of the videos that YouTube removed were first flagged by machines rather than humans.

Of the videos detected by machines, 38 percent were removed before they received a single view, and 31 percent received between one and 10 views before removal, meaning over 69 percent of the violative videos first detected by machines received fewer than 10 views before they were removed from YouTube.

In 2019, YouTube started giving a one-time warning for a first policy violation which gave creators the chance to review what went wrong before facing more penalties. As a result, over 80 percent of creators who receive a warning now never violate the company’s policies again.

Moreover, to preserve the policies and systems that protect the YouTube community, the company has introduced an ‘educational training course’ for creators.

“Starting today, creators will have the option of taking an educational training course when they receive a Community Guidelines warning. These resources will provide new ways for creators to understand how they can avoid uploading content that violates our policies in the future,” YouTube said.

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