YouTube revamps health videos after Biden flays vaccine ‘falsehoods’
YouTube will start adding factcheck labels and reorder its ranking system for videos about health with help from a nonprofit group just days after US President Joe Biden tore into social media for “killing people” by spreading falsehoods about vaccines.
YouTube, part of Alphabets ’ Google, announced the changes on Monday morning. Beneath certain videos about health, the company will add information panels, like those found at the bottom of clips about popular conspiracy theory topics such as the moon landing. YouTube will also start displaying select videos more prominently on the site when people search for health terms, similar to how it now treats certain news topics.
For both the material in these panels and its ranking system, YouTube said it will rely on a recent set of guidelines for verifying online information from the National Academy of Medicine, a non-governmental organisation.
“These principles for health sources are the first of its kind,” Garth Graham, director of health care for YouTube, wrote in a blog post. “We hope that other firms will also review and consider how these principles might help inform their work with their own products and platforms.”
Graham, a former health insurance executive, was hired by YouTube at the start of the year to lead a new effort to highlight and produce these videos.
Similar to Facebook and Twitter, YouTube has scrambled to better moderate its flood of user-generated media to deal with misinformation on Covid19 and vaccines. The platform has removed thousands of videos for violating its misinformation rules since the pandemic began, which has led to criticism for being too censorious, particularly from the political right.
Yet the Biden administration has gone on an offensive against technology companies in its push for more Americans to get vaccinated and the surgeongeneral released a report on health misinformation. And on Friday, Biden criticised social networks for letting antivaccination material spread.
Democratic senator Amy Klobuchar said misinformation on social media about vaccines adds urgency to her call to change liability standards for what is published on their platforms.
“YouTube removes content in accordance with our Covid-19 misinformation policies,” the company said. “We also demote borderline videos and prominently surface authoritative content for Covid-19-related search results, recommendations, and context panels.”
The company said it will continue working with health organisations and other medical experts to prevent the spread of misinformation.
Twitter also said it would do its part to “elevate authoritative health information”, while Facebook expanded on its defence over the weekend with a blog on how it cannot take the blame for a missed target for US vaccinations.