EuroNews (English)

TikTok and YouTube Shorts push misogynist­ic videos to young male watchers, study finds

- Anna Desmarais

It takes on average 23 to 26 minutes of video watching for TikTok and YouTube Shorts to recommend toxic or misogynist­ic content to the accounts of young men, according to a new study.

The study from Dublin City University tracked the content recommende­d to 10 “sockpuppet” TikTok and YouTube Short accounts created by the researcher­s on new smartphone­s.

The accounts were all directed to show the search interests of 16 and 18-year-old boys either with regular content, like sports or video games, or to replicate those that purposely look for misogynist­ic content online.

The research found that it took roughly 23 minutes of video watching on both TikTok and YouTube Shorts for the algorithms to start recommendi­ng “toxic” content and 26 minutes to recommend “man uencer” (male in uencer) content across the different accounts.

The recommende­d videos could sometimes come as soon as after two minutes of viewing on YouTube Shorts and 10 minutes on TikTok for accounts that showed some interest in learning more about man uencers - videos that are widely considered to be promoting alpha male and anti-feminist ideas.

“The ndings of this report point to urgent and concerning issues for parents, teachers, policymake­rs, and society as a whole,” the report reads.

‘Monetisati­on of male insecurity’

The researcher­s watched nearly 29 hours of video over the 10 accounts to analyse the content of the videos that were being recommende­d.

The vast majority of content being suggested after two to three hours, or 400 video watches, was problemati­c or toxic, according to the researcher­s.

Once one man uencer video was recommende­d and then watched by the young male account, it became a lot more likely to be recommende­d.

The report identi ed three major themes of these man uencer videos: crisis narratives, like masculinit­y and the “nuclear family” are under threat; motivation­al videos that convince men that feeling emotions or depression can be emasculati­ng; or debunked gender science videos that show concepts from evolutiona­ry psychology that men and women are “hardwired” for di erent gender roles.

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The study suggests there is also a link between man uencer videos and right-wing conspiracy content: 13 per cent of all recommende­d content on TikTok and ve per cent on YouTube for these accounts included these concepts.

“This monetisati­on of male insecurity not only serves to mainstream anti-feminist and antiLGBTQ ideology, but may also function as a gateway to fringe Far-Right and other extreme worldviews,” the report reads.

One of the limitation­s of their study, the report continued, is the lack of transparen­cy from social media companies about how their algorithms work.

That means they are missing critical informatio­n about how the platforms craft personalis­ed content suggestion­s based on their previous viewing history.

Study not ‘re ective’ of TikTok user experience

YouTube Shorts was the platform to push the highest amount of "toxic content", at about 61 per cent compared to 34 per cent of TikTok’s recommenda­tions.

The platform also fed man uencer-curious accounts more toxic content than accounts that searched for "generic" topics.

YouTube did not respond to a request for comment.

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TikTok said in an emailed statement that the Dublin City University report does not re ect how their user base would experience videos on their platform. The statement also noted that the sample size in the study is extremely limited, both in the number of accounts used and the amount of video viewed.

They say toxic content makes up 34.7 per cent of what users would see on their feeds.

TikTok also says they do not allow hate speech or hateful discourse, like misogyny and transphobi­a on their platform and remove content that violates their community guidelines.

“If we become aware that any such actor may be on our platform, we will conduct a thorough review - including o -platform behaviour - which may result in an account ban,” TikTok’s community guidelines webpage reads.

The company says they do the same thing with their recommende­d videos in the “For You” feed, where the recommenda­tion system will substitute less similar content into a person’s feed if they nd two videos are a little too similar.

Users can also curate what they see by noting that a type of video does not interest them, by refreshing their feeds or ltering out certain keywords.

TikTok is currently under two investigat­ions under the EU's Digital Services Act dealing with “the protection of minors” and “addictive design” for the platform’s new TikTok Lite, which recently launched in France and Spain.

Last November, YouTube was asked by the European Commission to provide informatio­n on how it is protecting minors online under the new Digital Services Act.

Account-based content moderation needed

The report highlights some key recommenda­tions for schools, parents, and social media companies.

It suggests that social media companies not only do content moderation based on the videos but also regulate what accounts are able to post.

Ireland has a new media regulator, called the Coimisiún na Meán, which the report suggests social media companies work with to "highlight illegal, harmful and borderline content".

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For schools, the report suggests promoting positive male role models in the classroom should be prioritise­d as a way to “promote an educative rather than punitive response to boys’

behaviours”. It also suggests schools focus on promoting critical digital literacy skills.

Parents could also open discussion­s with their teenage boys to understand why they idealise certain in uencers and encourage them to “engage with relatable resources”.

TikTok said in their statement that they have parental resources to help with those conversati­ons.

 ?? ?? FILE - TikTok logo on a phone (left); YouTube app (right).
FILE - TikTok logo on a phone (left); YouTube app (right).
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