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YouTube reportedly ignored employee warnings of 'bad virality' in exchange for massive growth

Nick Bastone   

YouTube reportedly ignored employee warnings of 'bad virality' in exchange for massive growth

Susan Wojcicki

Getty

YouTube CEO, Susan Wojcicki

  • YouTube executives ignored employee warnings and shelved product changes that could have curbed the spread of toxic videos on its site, according to a Bloomberg report.
  • The report - based on conversations with more than twenty current and former YouTube employees - describes YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki's focus on an internal goal to reach one billion hours of viewing a day at the expense of what some employees described as "bad virality."
  • YouTube responded in a tweet on Tuesday, saying, in part: "We can't stress this enough: Tackling challenges, misinfo, and harmful content remains our number one priority."

In their quest to drive massive viewer engagement, YouTube executives ignored employee warnings and shelved product changes that could have curbed the spread of toxic videos on its site, according to a Bloomberg report on Tuesday.

The report - which resulted from conversations with over twenty current and former YouTube employees - outlines multiple executive decisions that prioritized the site's growth ahead of cracking down on harmful content, like conspiracy theories and graphic videos.

One incident reported by Bloomberg included an employee suggestion that YouTube should stop recommending videos that didn't necessarily violate hate speech rules, but were troubling nonetheless. Years later, this January, YouTube finally adopted this approach.

Read more: YouTube all-but bans far-right figure Tommy Robinson by placing a ton of restrictions on his channel

The report describes YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki's focus on an internal goal to reach one billion hours of viewing a day. The company reached that milestone in 2016, but according to employees cited in the report, those massive engagement numbers came as troublesome videos were flourishing on the site. Some even nicknamed the problem as "bad virality," according to the report.

YouTube started taking meaningful action in late 2017 when it cut off monetization abilities for thousands of channels which pushed harmful videos. In the last quarter of 2018, according to the report, YouTube removed 8.8 million channels for violating its guidelines.

Last week, in a New York Times interview, YouTube's chief product officer Neal Mohan said the company has "made great strides" in curbing its recommendation of radical videos, known as the "rabbit hole effect."

In response to the Bloomberg report, YouTube tweeted on Tuesday, saying, in part: "We can't stress this enough: Tackling challenges, misinfo, and harmful content remains our number one priority."

YouTube did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

Read the full Bloomberg report here.

Get the latest Google stock price here.

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