YouTube Slams Creators with Mass Video Removals – Appeals Fall on Deaf Ears

YouTube axed over 5 million videos in just three months – but when creators fought back, less than a quarter got their content restored. Almost 110,000 appeals flooded in after creators saw their videos vanish, but YouTube only reinstated around 23,000.

First Ever Appeal Data Revealed

This fresh data comes from YouTube’s new community guidelines report – the very first time the platform has opened the curtain on the appeals process. For creators, wrongful takedowns have long been a headache, with many crying out for transparency. Now YouTube has delivered some numbers, though they paint a grim picture for content makers.

Massive Auto-Deletes and Spam Crackdown

  • Over 5 million videos deleted between October and December 2019
  • 109,000 of these removed videos sparked appeals
  • Only 23,000 videos reinstated – a meagre 21%
  • Most removals were automatic, with no human review
  • 60% of videos removed before even a single view
  • YouTube purged over 2 million channels, with 80% labelled spam

YouTube reinstated approximately 23,000 videos

Creators Slam Appeal Success Rate

A YouTube spokesperson told The Verge: “Our team is focused on accurately and consistently enforcing our policies… one way we hold ourselves accountable is by making sure users can easily appeal and monitoring the rate at which they do.”

But the stats tell a harsh tale. Creators only appealed fewer than 2% of all removed videos, and YouTube overturned less than half of 1% of those removals. Copyright takedowns remain a murky area, with no details provided.

Reasons Behind the Mass Removals

The report breaks down why videos got the chop:

  • 50%+ removed for spam or deceptive practices
  • 15% for child safety violations
  • 13% for nudity or sexual content
  • Just under 3% for hateful or abusive content
  • 0.6% (about 33,000 videos) for cyberbullying and harassment

The platform recently tightened rules on creator-on-creator harassment after public criticism last summer.

“This is just one more step towards providing transparency into the work we do to quickly and consistently enforce our policies,” the spokesperson added. “We’re working to add more exhibits to this report over 2020.”

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