Inappropriate Comments Notification Experiment, Timestamps for Community Guidelines from YouTube



What's up, my readers?

Welcome to my first blog.
YouTube got some stellar updates for you this week.

First up, about comments.
They have heard from YouTuber's feedback that spam and inappropriate comments are top of mind for video creators. They are always looking for ways to improve the comments experience for everyone.
Many users have told them that they would like to know if and when their comment has been removed
for violating one of their Community Guidelines. Additionally, Youtube wants to protect creators from a single user's ability to negatively impact the community via comments either on a single channel or multiple channels.

They are testing out a new comment removal notification that clarifies if and when a comment has been removed for violating one of our Community Guidelines. And in some cases, when a user has left multiple abusive comments, they will time out that user's ability to comment for up to 24 hours.

So what's their goal?
Well, it's to reduce the number of abusive comments across the platform and to let users who do violate the Community Guidelines know what they've done so that they can correct their behavior and contribute more positively to the community next time they comment.

Providing a link to the YouTube Experiments forum post YouTube Help , where you can read a description of the experiment.

Next up, they are starting to roll out a new card on the content tab for Studio Mobile and Web
that shows creators the typical amount of views they get on different formats. So VODs, shorts, live streams.Now, similar to the latest video performance card on the dashboard, typical views look across
the last 10 VODs, shorts, and live streams to show you the typical range in the first 28 days.

Note for live streams, we consider all views, both live views and those that appear as archives.
Up next, last June, They worked on an experiment regarding timestamps for a subset of Community
Guidelines policy violations.Now in this experiment, timestamps are available in emails and in the appeals flow in Studio when we believe a violation has occurred.
Creators are provided with specific details around the Community Guidelines violation and helpful resources from the help center related to that violation.
Now, in order to gain more feedback, improve the feature, and increase transparency,they're expanding the experiment to more creators.
So in addition to the harmful and dangerous policy they're adding coverage for three additional policies.

Those are
  • child safety
  • suicide
  • self-harm
and violent or graphic content.

Please provide comments. There are series of upgrades to posts over the coming months
to make them more visual,engaging, and fun.Main goal is to allow creators to connect more deeply with their viewers.Creators with access to the community tab on Android will now be able to add filters, text, and stickerson their images for posts directly in the YouTube app.

Their plan to expand this to creators on iOS in the future.And that's about it for this week's news flash.
From the creators of YouTube to YouTube creators,

we'll see you on next blog.

Thank you for the patience.

Source of Data:- Creator Insider - Youtube

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