Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

YouTube To Hire 10,000 People To Root Out Bad Content

IANS, 06 Dec, 2017 12:45 PM
    YouTube will hire 10,000 people to monitor and control violent extremism on the popular video streaming platform, along with curbing content that endangers children.
     
     
    In an interview to The Daily Telegraph, Susan Wojcicki, Chief Executive of the Google-owned video-sharing site, said on Monday that "bad actors are exploiting" YouTube to "mislead, manipulate, harass or even harm".
     
     
    "We will continue the growth of our teams, with the goal of bringing the total number of people across Google working to address content that might violate our policies to over 10,000 in 2018," Wojcicki was quoted as saying.
     
     
    YouTube along with Facebook, Google and Twitter have come under scrutiny over the availability of terrorist material and propaganda on their platforms.
     
     
    British Prime Minister Theresa May has also asked social media platforms to remove terror content after a series of terror-related attacks this year in the country.
     
     
    "The tech companies have made significant progress on this issue, but we need to go further and faster to reduce the time it takes to reduce terrorist content online," May said in October.
     
     
    YouTube last month announced it will remove content on the platform that attempts to pass as being "friendly for kids".
     
     
    "While some of these videos may be suitable for adults, others are completely unacceptable, so we are working to remove them from YouTube," Johanna Wright, Vice President of Product Management, YouTube, wrote in a blog post.
     
     
    The Google-owned company will apply machine learning technology and automated tools in order to discover potentially exploitive content.
     
     
    YouTube has terminated 50 channels and removed thousands of videos as also advertisements from 5,00,000 exploitive videos under the current set of guidelines.
     
     
    The company will also continue to work with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) to report potentially illegal behaviour to law enforcement, said Wright.
     
     
    Meanwhile, YouTube Kids has announced new measures for parents if they find children watching inappropriate videos at home even by mistake.
     
     
    With over 800 million learning video views per day, YouTube Kids is now live in 37 countries. 

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    How glass can help build super-fast computers

    How glass can help build super-fast computers
    New research demonstrates how glass could be manipulated to create a material that would allow computers to transfer information using light....

    How glass can help build super-fast computers

    Tool to help women report harassment faced on Twitter

    Tool to help women report harassment faced on Twitter
    The micro-blogging site has launched a tool that will allow women to report abuse and harassment on Twitter and get the issue resolved within 24 hours....

    Tool to help women report harassment faced on Twitter

    Lasers to measure wind speed and direction

    Lasers to measure wind speed and direction
    The idea is to provide long-term measurements of how much power offshore wind can generate and to help designers prevent wind turbine fatigue....

    Lasers to measure wind speed and direction

    Half of world population to use mobile internet by 2020: GSMA

    Half of world population to use mobile internet by 2020: GSMA
    "It is calculated that there were 2.2 billion mobile internet subscribers in 2013, representing approximately 30 percent of the global population. GSMA...

    Half of world population to use mobile internet by 2020: GSMA

    Social media helps get science work noticed

    Social media helps get science work noticed
    Sharing science work via social media like Twitter is good for researchers in getting their works noticed, shows a study....

    Social media helps get science work noticed

    Bonnet-embedded device to charge your car

    Bonnet-embedded device to charge your car
    A team from Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Brisbane has developed lightweight “supercapacitors” that can be combined with regular....

    Bonnet-embedded device to charge your car