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YouTube Is Fighting Conspiracy Theories With 'Authoritative' Context and Outside Links (theverge.com) 311

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.

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YouTube Is Fighting Conspiracy Theories With 'Authoritative' Context and Outside Links

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  • Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:05AM (#56922636) Journal
    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.
    • Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Moryath ( 553296 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:11AM (#56922666)

      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?

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Mashiki ( 184564 )

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

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Moryath ( 553296 )

          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.

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            by Mashiki ( 184564 )

            Considering that media matters has a long history of "quote mining" aka manufacturing news & outrage, lying through omission, and pushing political agendas despite it's classification status. You're simply ignorant, and are happily defending a company that's just as bad.

            I enjoyed the "white supremacy conservatives" bit. Get that racism and bigotry out early, fly that flag. It's doing a bang up job for the democrats and progressives. When you finish frothing at the mouth, you can sit down and read jus [amazon.com]

          • Media matter is not a fact checking site. They are a correct the record site for the Clintons who have coordinated activity when Hillary Clinton ran for president.

            You can stop sucking David Brock's dick.
        • Thing is....the are tin foil hatters and conspiracy theorists, until the aren't.

          The govt has done some things, and lied about things over the history of our country....things like the revelations in the the Pentagon papers [wikipedia.org], and MKUltra [wikipedia.org], etc.

          Things that until revealed, seemed like pretty kooky and unthinkable did come out to be true.

          I'm sure we don't know ALL the things that have occurred by or sanctioned by our government over the years...

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            Of course there are government conspiracies that don't come out until later. For example, there may be a conspiracy for the Trump Administration to collude with Russia to break up NATO and sow discord amongst Western Allies - But we just don't know yet - And may never know.

            There may be a conspiracy for the Heritage Foundation to select the next Supreme Court Judge. But again, we don't know.

            However, there are huge areas that are pretty cut-and-dry.

            When Trump says the USA has a trade deficit with Cana
          • Well, mkultra was kooky and unthinkable, but not nearly as kooky and unthinkable as the conspiracy theories claimed.
            Government conspiracies never seem to be as wide spread and organized as is often believed.

      • Once people get an idea stuck in their mind, they tend to look for evidence to reinforce it rather than the other way around. This is something that everyone is guilty of, even really smart people [wikipedia.org]. What they believe is rather inconsequential, but trying to get them to change their mind by arguing with them is almost impossible. It doesn't matter how much expertise you have or how many other sources, they'll all be ignored.

        From personal experience the only effective method I've ever discovered to get peop
      • Most all people learn, but social media provides a way for a small portion of the mentally ill to share their common delusions in a supportive atmosphere. People who profit from mental illness, like Alex Jones, have an obvious interest in promoting their delusions, the louder the better.

      • Hey Inforwars has great news. Didn't you see the on about how the elites keep their sex slaves on Mars? CNN wouldn't dare publish such news.
    • Re:Why? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:15AM (#56922696) Homepage Journal

      TFA shows that with breaking news there is a little warning saying that details may change. A search for "moon landing" uses a snippet from Encyclopedia Britannica.

      Seems like they have thought this one through. It's very conservative.

      • Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by penandpaper ( 2463226 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:28AM (#56922794) Journal

        Yea, what could possibly go wrong [slashdot.org].

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Lots of things, but is the odd mistake that gets quickly fixed really worse than regularly showing conspiracy theories about the moon landings, US presidents being in the KKK, Obama declaring martial law, vaccines giving kids autism etc?

          Let's not let perfect be the enemy of good here.

          • Re:Why? (Score:5, Informative)

            by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh&gmail,com> on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @11:06AM (#56923024) Journal

            Exactly, and making perfect the enemy of good is just the tactic post-truth types love to use against fact-checking. Case in point: "Sometimes fresh news articles get corrected, therefore let's give batshit nutjobbery and Russian propaganda a head start (particularly on hot-button issues where I want to empower post-truth narratives) until things settle down."

            • I don't think his point was that the system was imperfect.... more that the system is ripe for abuse. If "nutjobbery" and "russian propaganda" have a head start, it's because YOUR ideology is in 2nd place. And don't try to pretend this isn't political for you.

          • Odd mistake? How many mistakes does it take to damage the reputation of a "reputable source"? Are the major media outlets even held accountable for any misinformation they put out? No. No one is fired for putting out misinformation from any major outlet and there is never any accountability for them deceiving the public at large or pushing a political bias.*

            Conspiracy theories are held by a very slime minority of people. So what? You are going to give those conspiracies vindication because "look at what goo

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              How many mistakes does it take to damage the reputation of a "reputable source"?

              Depends on the nature of the mistake and if they publish corrections.

    • Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by PhrostyMcByte ( 589271 ) <phrosty@gmail.com> on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:21AM (#56922754) Homepage

      Let people learn when they screw up

      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. If Google can do something to flag obviously false reports as what they are, then I say more power to them -- it'll be doing us a service.

      Even if they take things that are merely probably false or highly spun and supply a few links to what reputable sources say about the issue, that'd help keep people more informed and outside of their bubble.

      I don't like having one company be an arbiter of truth either, but... if people can't do it for themselves, who is going to do it? Traditional news agencies have been unable to counter this round of nonsense, and in some cases are contributing to it.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        Oh I see you seem to think 13 twitter trolls and internet meme's corrupted people's minds so as not to vote for Hillary Clinton. Is that your take....

        So who exactly watches and corrects traditional news agencies when they spew lies like NBC did when NBC said Jill Stein had a show on RT....NBC NEVER corrected the lie.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          NBC said Jill Stein had a show on RT

          Do you have a link for this? A quick google didn't turn up anything.

      • Re: (Score:3, 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?

        • Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by PhrostyMcByte ( 589271 ) <phrosty@gmail.com> on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @11:06AM (#56923022) Homepage

          The person who won does not matter to my post. There is evidence showing that regardless of who you were voting for, you were being targeted. Some of it was more obvious than others, but people on all sides of the political spectrum -- me included -- failed to filter out some of the spin coming their way.

          Stop jumping to conclusions with divisive outrage. It's what they wanted. There's no room for pride here.

    • Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by TigerPlish ( 174064 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:23AM (#56922766)

      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.

      • and we left tons of trash which are proof enough..

        Huh? I can't see it from here. Your proof by way of fake photos from sources who are all in on the conspiracy are meaningless! We don't spit in the face of anything. You just need to show us actual proof not something from your fake news website like nasa.org.

        Signed, your friendly neighborhood conspiracy theorist.
        OPEN YOUR EYES!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You can still watch all the crazies you want. There will just be other suggested videos explaining why those people are total bat shit.

    • The reason this is bad because currently the "authoritative" sources are actually incredibly biased, manufacture stories, and often hide information to further an agenda. They understand that if you control the narrative, you can manufacture a reality, or at least keep compliant people invested in such a narrative.

      For example, you might yell tinfoil hate but here are a few off the top of my head:
      Dan Rather, anchor long time CBS anchor, forced to resign in disgrace for manufacturing anti-conservative news
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Moryath ( 553296 )

        https://yourlogicalfallacyis.c... [yourlogicalfallacyis.com]

        Meanwhile - Fox Lies pumps out daily falsehoods and propaganda, the same with talk radio, not to even mention the various tinfoil hat youtube sites, "Infowars", conservative cross burners like Curt Schilling and Roseanne who went whole-hog into insane nonsense...

      • by smugfunt ( 8972 )

        the "authoritative" sources are actually incredibly biased, manufacture stories, and often hide information to further an agenda

        Indeed:
        Mighty Wurlitzer [wikipedia.org]
        Operation Mockingbird [wikipedia.org]
        Why waste good propaganda on foreigners? [wikipedia.org]

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      To correct content people upload. Other people are searching for and enjoy. SJW want that content reported on and corrected for political reasons.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Many of those have "corrections" issued a few days later, meaning that they were NOT in fact, authoritative.

      OK... So gather up corrections to any videos the user has watched, and when they arrive show them to the user as a "Notice bar" that will keep coming up until dismissed ---- If there is no correction, the noticebar can also be used to inform the user that a video they had watched was later found to be fake news with an optional link to a correcting source.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Please! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    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.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      Recommendations are based on your history. I don't get much of this crap.

      If most of you recommendations are clickbait it can means:
      - You click the clickbait
      - You share an account with someone who click the clickbait
      - You have no history
      - You are not logged in and you block tracking
      - You are actually talking about the "trending" section (the only untargeted section)

  • by H3lldr0p ( 40304 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:16AM (#56922704) Homepage

    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.

    • 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.

      • This. Fighting irrational/illogical/counterfactual thinking is like fighting an outbreak of zombie virus: Trying to find a cure is a waste of time and may even be impossible, it's much more important to contain the spread - that means reducing new exposure. The authoritative videos are like a zombie proximity warning system. Won't help the zombies, but it will help to keep the uninfected but vulnerable from becoming infected.

        People who want to spread ideologies that rely on irrational/illogical/counterfactu

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

      And I wish YouTube would realize that trying to police reason, logic, and facts on their platform makes herding cats look easy.

      They will. Soon enough.

    • This is a likely scenario, but the division will not be what you think. It'll be more like a big cluster of big power who declare trust in each other, and those who don't trust them are refused any platform. It's like the NYTimes trusts the Pentagon and the CIA. Wikipedia trusts the NYTimes. Youtube trusts the NYTimes and Wikipedia. Big interests trust Youtube because they get some control over the output. So the CIA considers Youtube safe.
      The essence of a conspiracy theorist is not the incompetence but tha

  • It deletes them as “undue weight” or “not notable”. You also have the reverting admins. Anyone who likes conspiracies don’t use Wikipedia as a source due to the “admin conspiracy”. When Wikipedia whines for donations, tell them your money is “not notable”.
  • Updated (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ka9dgx ( 72702 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:19AM (#56922732) Homepage Journal

    So, now we need to update the old Russian saying
    ""there's no truth in Pravda, and no You in YouTube"

  • Combating fake news with Wikipedia ? Surely you jest....
    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      Fighting fire with fire is a thing, but it tends to end badly if you don't know exactly what you're doing.

  • by nnull ( 1148259 )

    Yay, let's make YouTube even more bland than it already is!

  • by king neckbeard ( 1801738 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:33AM (#56922824)

    The reason "fake news" can thrive is because MSM is so constantly horseshit that people correctly distrust it. The problem is that the replacements often have lower quality and reliability. The answer is to bludgeon MSM into shape. Ban CNN's account for a week when they post a bullshit story, and this will be resolved pretty quickly, because it's treating the cause. What Youtube is proposing here is treating the symptoms.

    • I'm sorry, but anyone who replaces something problematic with another thing that is a thousand times worse has no one to blame but themselves.

      And really, going to any American cable news aside from C-SPAN as a primary source of information is idiotic. CNN gets knocked for being biased plenty, but real issue is that their coverage is incredibly light-weight and shallow.

      • I'm sorry, but anyone who replaces something problematic with another thing that is a thousand times worse has no one to blame but themselves.

        Personal responsibility is an illusion. Yes, it's shitty behavior, but it's also reality. You can either try and blame people, or look at the problem amorally and figure out how to solve the damn problem.

  • Title fixed. This is all about suppressing news that goes against the establishment narrative - if Youtube had been big in 2003 it would have been tagging videos questioning Saddam's WMD's and ties to Al Queda as conspiracy theories.

    Speaking of CT, Youtube doesn't give a shit about batshit crazy theories as long as they're coming from CNN or MSDNC. Like how Putin was such a master chess player that he knew years in advance that a professional wrestling character could be president, but at the same time wa

    • I think that's a good post. This is just another step in a censorship drive of historic proportions. It's not very centralized though. Youtube for instance works with a Trusted Flagger Program. In principle these don't decide what to censor but Youtube says they advise very well so in practice just about anything these organisations don't like is removed. Youtube itself doesn't care. Fake news has got nothing to do with it.

      • Here is a short video from the ADL, Youtube's trusted flagger, describing their efforts to build a online hate index. [youtube.com] If censorship isn't centralized yet, it soon will be.

        The slide at :27 was extra interesting. And of course, comments on all their recent videos are disabled.

        • I doubt centralization is key here. AI can drive automation and in that way it increases the scope, the share of the web they control. But just take the trusted flagger program, last I read there were about 100 organizations. There will be more but each will take care of its own interests, even if they outsource the operations to the same server farms.
          'hate' is simply a pejorative word for 'anyone who objects to what you're doing', and together with 'subversion' or 'incitement' it can be applied to any form

          • If the desired outcome is uniformity of opinion through the promotion and suppression of narratives, then coordination between many players would not be efficient or desirable. Eventually, I expect the ADL and SPLC to eventually join forces in order to further enhance our user experience, then the Ministry of Love will be complete. Any extraneous groups will be for the sake of appearances.
  • An even better option might be to apply a quality filter to search results so that bullshit conspiracy brain damage sinks down the search ratings. Demonetize it too.
  • I think they meant "authoritarian".
  • The IT giants are lining themselves up to control what we're supposed to believe. They want to be our corporatised "Ministry of Information" that puts us back on the straight and narrow path of groupthink. All news is fake, by definition. It's all biased, skewed, and has hidden or overt agendas, e.g. the UK's Daily Mail and Fox News. Google et al. want to be the gatekeepers who decide. Just imagine how powerful that'd make them.

    And remember that Google took money from BP during the Gulf of Mexico disaster

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