Today we’re sharing several changes designed to better protect data on children’s content on YouTube. Starting in about four months:
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Replying to @YouTube
Hey, fuzzy blue monster here who doesn't make kids content but consistently gets put under the Sesame Street category anyway. Is there any way I can avoid getting hit by these changes?
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Replying to @ArloStuff @YouTube
The target audience is what's most important here (you know your videos best!). If your content isn’t made for kids, no action needed. More specifics/examples here: https://yt.be/help/pE5Q and we’ll have more resources & content strategy guides over the coming months to help.
6 replies 0 retweets 23 likes -
Replying to @TeamYouTube @YouTube
What worries me is the automatic flagging you mentioned. My content is family friendly, but there was once a time when every single video I put out was automatically deemed inappropriate and demonetized until I appealed. I'm afraid of the system ignoring my intentions.
2 replies 5 retweets 234 likes -
Replying to @ArloStuff
This applies to videos that are specifically made for kids – you can see Section D1 of the FTC FAQs for their definition of child directed content: https://ftc.gov/tips-advice/business-center/guidance/complying-coppa-frequently-asked-questions …. We'll have more resources on this in coming months.
2 replies 0 retweets 13 likes -
Replying to @TeamYouTube
You're not listening. Your automatic flagging algorithms have incorrectly flagged me in the past and caused me a lot of grief. Right now YouTube is putting my videos in the Sesame Street category, which worries me because it means the system already doesn't understand my content.
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Replying to @ArloStuff @TeamYouTube
You might get affected by the learning machines growing pains. (But I think we all hope here you dont). Knowing youtube though. If it ever happens, they'll fix it for you and if I'm looking at this right. One Manuel override will do the trick
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I still dont think that justifies how terrible of a system that it is. If it affects people' livliehoods to the extent that it does, it needs care that team youtube obviously does not give a rat's ass about.
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It's more the third party you should focus your anger at. It's the FTC that seems to be gleefully using loop holes in an attempt to fine youtube and its users out of existence. This crazy move is a fast response so that we dont lose the platform
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Why the fuck is the FTC this involved woth a public forum? Youtube has section 230 protections specifically against this shit
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