YouTube Heroes program seeks crowdsourced moderation, but panned as censorship - Action News
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YouTube Heroes program seeks crowdsourced moderation, but panned as censorship

YouTube is looking for 'heroes' to help moderate its content and comments sections, but early feedback has been overwhelmingly negative with users describing it as crowdsourced censorship.

Program awards users points for flagging inappropriate content, writing captions and subtitles for videos

A trailer announces YouTube's Heroes program, which will awards users points and perks for moderating the site's mountains of online video and community content. (YouTube)

YouTube is looking for "heroes" to help moderate its content and comments sections, but early feedback has been overwhelmingly negative with users describing it as crowdsourced censorship.

Users who join the Heroes program, which was announced Tuesday,will earn points for adding captions and subtitles to videos, flagging inappropriate videos and answering questions on the site's Help forum.

Accruing points will earn them privileges like joining video chats with others in the Heroes program, exclusive previews of upcoming product launches and the ability to flag abusive videos en masse instead of one at a time.

YouTube Heroes won't have direct moderation powers on their own, though. Anyone who watches a YouTube video can flag it as inappropriate,whether they're a regular user or a 'Hero.' However, YouTubeemployees ultimately make the final decision on what to do with content marked as inappropriate.

Users on YouTube made their voices heard almost immediately, with an overwhelming number of Dislikes on the announcement video. It currently has over 200,000 Dislikes compared to 3,000 Likes, after nearly 600,000 views.

A search for YouTube Heroes on the site brings up dozens of reaction videos from creators, calling it "stupid," "censorship," and "YouTube's new snitch program."

Critics expressed concern that the program could potentially enable mass harassment campaigns where users can flood the system with reports onvideos or users whose content or politics they disagree with.

They also argued that the work users in the Heroes program performed would better be served by paid employees rather than unpaid volunteers.

Dan Speerin, a YouTube creator and vice-president of the Independent Web Series Creators of Canada (IWCC), says the sparse details about how the Heroes program will workfollows a history of YouTube introducing new, potentially paradigm-shifting changes to its platform without properly informing its creators and users how it will affect them.

"Is a community neighbourhood watch something that could work? Yeah, but it would take a lot of resources onGoogle'sside to make sure this is rolled out correctly," he told CBC News.

"This is a huge undertaking that you tried to explain in a minute-thirty with a nice little video. We need more info," he said.