YouTube Recommendations for 'Alt-Right' Videos have Dropped Dramatically, Study Shows:
Google has made "major changes" to its recommendations system on YouTube that have reduced the amount of "alt-right" videos recommended to users, according to a study led by Nicolas Suzor, an associate professor at Queensland University of Technology.
During the first two weeks of February, alt-right videos appeared in YouTube's "Up Next" recommendations sidebar 7.8 percent of the time (roughly one in 13). From Feb. 15 onward, that number dropped to 0.4 percent (roughly one in 250).
Suzor's study took random samples of 3.6 million videos, and used 81 channels listed on a recent study by Rebecca Lewis [.pdf] as a starting point. That list includes voices like Richard Spencer, an American white supremacist, but also includes more mainstream voices like Joe Rogan, who does not self-identify as alt-right but often plays host to more extremist voices on his podcast (including alt-right figures such as Alex Jones).
The drop appears significant, but it's difficult to figure precisely how that drop occurred. We don't know if YouTube is targeting 'alt-right' videos specifically or if the drop off is part of broader changes to YouTube's recommendation system.
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 15 2019, @09:02PM
You seem to have written this assuming nobody will ever be mistaken about whether something is genocide or not, the folks who believe in 'white genocide' are a real counterexample in today's society of why people need to be willing to consider that what they currently view as genocide (i.e. mass immigration) is actually acceptable policy.
The alt-right claim that a genocide is occurring and are trying to stop it. They're wrong, but this IS what many of them believe in good faith. The worst of them skip the 'debate people to convince them this genocide is wrong' stage and go straight to direct action to prevent what they incorrectly think is genocide.
They're wrong, it isn't genocide and it isn't planned, but to convince them of that you need them to be willing to discuss whether what they consider genocide is acceptable policy. By precluding that discussion you preclude attempts to convince them that what they call 'white genocide' isn't genocide.
You can't demand they be open to debating what they consider genocidal policy if you aren't.