YouTube says it took down more than 8 MILLION videos in 3 months as the true scale of terrorism, child abuse and hate speech content on the site is revealed
- Most deleted videos were 'spam or people attempting to upload adult content'
- 6.7 million of the videos were flagged by machines and not humans
- Out of those, 76 per cent were removed before receiving views from users
- Included in the videos was footage of terrorism, child abuse and hate speech
YouTube has taken down more than eight million videos in three months for violating community guidelines as the true scale of offensive material posted on the site is revealed.
Included in the deleted videos was footage of terrorism, child abuse and hate speech content - 80 per cent of which were flagged by machines.
The Google-owned company said the majority of deleted videos were 'spam or people attempting to upload adult content'.
Just last week it was revealed YouTube was still airing adverts on extremist videos promoting Nazism and paedophilia.
At the end of last year the Google-owned company announced it would be hiring 10,000 people to better monitor content in 2018.
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YouTube has taken down more than eight million videos in three months for violating community guidelines as the true scale of offensive material is revealed (stock image)
The information was included in the company's first quarterly report on its performance between October and December last year.
According to the report, 6.7 million of the videos were flagged by machines and not humans.
Out of those, 76 per cent were removed before receiving any views from users.
'Machines are allowing us to flag content for review at scale, helping us remove millions of violative videos before they are ever viewed', the company wrote in a blog post.
'At the beginning of 2017, 8 per cent of the videos flagged and removed for violent extremism were taken down with fewer than 10 views.
'We introduced machine learning flagging in June 2017. Now more than half of the videos we remove for violent extremism have fewer than 10 views', the company wrote.
YouTube has faced multiple complaints from advertisers who claim the company is failing to take down offensive content on the site.
Between October and December last year there were 28.7 million videos reported from YouTube users.
Nine million of those videos (30 per cent) were said to contain sexually explicit content and eight million (25 per cent) were said to be spam or misleading.
More than half videos removed for violent extremism have fewer than 10 views (pictured). At the beginning of 2017, 8 per cent of the videos flagged and removed for violent extremism were taken down with fewer than 10 views
The company has had several issues over its content in recent years.
Last week it was revealed more than 300 companies and organisations ran adverts on YouTube channels promoting offensive content.
Many of the companies - which included Adidas, Amazon and Netflix - said they were unaware their adverts had been placed on these channels and would be investigating.
According to a an investigation by CNN, companies such as Adidas, Amazon, Cisco, Facebook, Hershey, Hilton, LinkedIn, Mozilla, Netflix, Nordstrom and Under Armour may have unknowingly helped finance these channels.
It seems public money also went to fund this offensive content, including adverts from the US Department of Transportation and Centres for Disease Control.
The site has more than a billion users who watch one billion hours of footage each day.
Advertisers have to trust YouTube to decide what videos are appropriate for their adverts.
American clothes company Under Armour is pausing advertising after its commercials appeared next to a YouTube channel called 'Wife With A Purpose' which promoted white nationalism.
'We have strong values-led guidelines in place and are working with YouTube to understand how this could have slipped through the guardrails', a company spokesperson said.
'We take these matters very seriously and are working to rectify this immediately,' the spokesperson said.
Adverts for Mozilla and 20th Century Fox Film were placed on a Nazi YouTube channel. YouTube later deleted the channel for violating community guidelines.
However, when contacted for comment, Brian Ruhe who ran the channel said he did not want to be referred to as a 'neo-Nazi', telling CNN he was a 'real, genuine and sincere Nazi'.
'We have partnered with our advertisers to make significant changes to how we approach monetisation on YouTube with stricter policies, better controls and greater transparency', a YouTube spokesperson told MailOnline.
'When we find that ads mistakenly ran against content that doesn't comply with our policies, we immediately remove those ads.
'We know that even when videos meet our advertiser friendly guidelines, not all videos will be appropriate for all brands. But we are committed to working with our advertisers and getting this right', the spokesperson said.
The incident has again raised concerns about whether brands who advertise on YouTube can safeguard the brand's integrity.
Adverts for Mozilla and 20th Century Fox Film were placed on a Nazi YouTube channel. YouTube later deleted the channel (pictured) for violating community guidelines
In November Lidl, Mars, Adidas, Cadbury maker Mondelez, Diageo and other big companies all pulled advertising from YouTube.
An investigation found the video sharing site was showing clips of scantily clad children alongside the ads of major brands.
One video of a pre-teenage girl in a nightie drew 6.5 million views.
An investigation by The Times found YouTube, a unit of Alphabet subsidiary Google , had allowed sexualised imagery of children to be easily searchable and not lived up to promises to better monitor and police its services to protect children.
The investigation also found BT, Deutsche Bank, eBay, Amazon, and Talktalk also had adverts that appeared next to the inappropriate videos.
At the end of last year YouTube said it had removed more than 50 user channels and has stopped running ads on more than 3.5 million videos since June.
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