Fact-checkers put spotlight on YouTube © Associated Press/Jenny Kane A group of 85 fact-checking organizations wrote an open letter to YouTube to Wednesday faulting the video platform for spreading disinformation and misinformation globally. “As an international network of fact-checking organizations, we monitor how lies spread online — and everyday, we see that YouTube is one of the major conduits of online disinformation and misinformation worldwide,” the letter addressed to YouTube CEO Susan Wojciki reads. The organizations, including the Philippines’ Rappler, Univision and The Washington Post Fact-checker, call YouTube's efforts to moderate content “insufficient.” Specifically, they argue, the platform has allowed dangerous misinformation about COVID-19 to circulate easily. And they say the problem is especially pronounced for content in languages other than English. “In the last year we have seen conspiracy groups thriving and collaborating across borders, including an international movement that started in Germany, jumped to Spain and spread through Latin America, all on YouTube,” the letter reads. “Meanwhile, millions of other users were watching videos in Greek and Arabic that encouraged them to boycott vaccinations or treat their COVID-19 infections with bogus cures.” Read more about the platform’s defense. |
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