The Pak Banker

YouTube sharpens videos recommenda­tion

- SAN FRANCISCO -AP

Google's YouTube has updated its recommenda­tion feature to spotlight videos users are likely to find the most gratifying, brushing aside concerns that such an approach can trap people in bubbles of misinforma­tion and likeminded opinions.

The new feature, which arrived in January but has not previously been reported, uses a measure of satisfacti­on derived from a massive and ongoing user survey to predict and promote videos that people would rank as among the best they have watched recently. The goal is to prevent the negative sentiments that can arise when people watch hours and hours of uninspired programs, said Jim McFadden and Cristos Goodrow, who work on recommenda­tion technology at YouTube, which is part of Alphabet Inc. But the change comes at a time when YouTube and other social media firms are facing heavy criticism from advertiser­s, regulators and advocacy groups for failing to police content and account for the way their services shape public opinion.

Russian agents exploited the rec- ommendatio­n systems of Facebook Inc, Twitter Inc and YouTube to popularize propaganda and fake news during the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election. The companies responded with increased user verificati­on and factchecki­ng tools, but their recommenda­tions remain focused on winning the attention and boosting the enjoyment of users.

"The risk is not that we are just siloing ourselves, but we're able to also reinforce pre-existing, flawed viewpoints," said Jacob Groshek, a Boston University associate professor who researches the influence of social media and "filter bubbles."

YouTube automatica­lly recommends videos through a machine learning algorithm that analyzes the characteri­stics of videos and the behavior of its 1.5 billion users to generate personaliz­ed viewing recommenda­tions. These recommenda­tions, which appear on YouTube's homepage and alongside clips, have become a centerpiec­e of the service, encouragin­g people to watch videos that are similar to ones they have spent significan­t time viewing in the past. Recommenda­tions now drive 70 per- cent of overall "watch time" on YouTube, compared with 40 percent in early 2014, the company said.

The more time people spend watching, the more ad slots YouTube can sell. Sales of YouTube commercial­s are among Google's top growth areas. But by last year, YouTube's prediction tool had matured, said McFadden, a software engineer at YouTube since 2011. He said the idea of pinpointin­g "satisfacti­on" came after he had watched "particular­ly good" videos, including a commenceme­nt speech by the late author David Foster Wallace.

"You listen to it and say this was really good," McFadden said. But "there's nothing really in our data about how much I like this."

He worried that too many people felt their hours each night watching sports highlights, comedy clips and makeup tutorials were a waste.

Now YouTube is gauging satisfacti­on by surveying nearly 10 percent of users about which videos they enjoy. One version of the survey asks whether a video watched in the last week was "one of the best," "great," "about average," "poor" or "one of the worst." The feedback is a fresh data point in the recommenda­tion algorithm. Lesser emphasis is now put on actions that may be a proxy for enjoyment but are used with varying intent, such as "thumbs up" and "thumbs down" ratings.YouTube executives acknowledg­e that the approach can help misinforma­tion spread. A user who says a video describing the moon landing as a hoax was among the best they watched in the last week would cause that video, and similar ones, to be recommende­d more widely.

"We would love it if the satisfacti­on mechanism pushed down videos about ' we never landed on the moon' but people will report satisfacti­on on quite a variety of things," Goodrow, vice president of engineerin­g at YouTube, said in an interview.

The company releases neither recommenda­tion nor satisfacti­on data about individual videos. Johanna Wright, vice president of product management at YouTube, said in an interview that the company is taking steps to combat misinforma­tion, including giving greater prominence to well-known media organizati­ons in search results on trending topics.

Next year, YouTube is planning to have a similar initiative around science videos to surface "the establishe­d belief on the topic" on science videos, she said.

Still, YouTube's chief goal is to maximize viewing time. Alphabet Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt said recently that there was little the company could do absent a bigger societal change.

The problem of filter bubbles will persist, Schmidt told an internatio­nal security conference Nov. 18, "until we decide collective­ly" that users should see content from "someone not like you." Critics reject the notion that YouTube is powerless.

Guillaume Chaslot, a member of its recommenda­tions engineerin­g team who left Google in 2013 and is working to launch a nonprofit group to investigat­e social media algorithms, said YouTube could experiment more or release data about recommenda­tions to researcher­s.

He worries though that YouTube will not act until public outcry grows severe or existing tactics impair watch time. "Users are not asking YouTube to optimize for truth," Chaslot said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan