How YouTube evolves and enforces its policies: Hate Speech
We are committed to our responsibility to protect the YouTube community from harmful content. One of the most complex and constantly evolving areas we deal with is hate speech. We systematically review and re-review all our policies to make sure we are drawing the line in the right place, often consulting with subject matter experts for insight on emerging trends. For our hate speech policy, we work with experts in subjects like violent extremism, supremacism, civil rights, and free speech from across the political spectrum.
As a result of this evaluation, in June 2019 we announced an update to our hate speech policy to specifically prohibit videos alleging that a group is superior in order to justify discrimination, segregation or exclusion based on attributes like age, gender, race, caste, religion, sexual orientation or veteran status. We also announced that we will remove content denying that well-documented violent events took place.
Hate speech is a complex policy area to enforce at scale, as decisions require nuanced understanding of local languages and contexts. To help us consistently enforce our policy, we have expanded our review team’s linguistic and subject matter expertise. We’re also deploying machine learning to better detect potentially hateful content to send for human review, applying lessons from our enforcement against other types of content, like violent extremism. Sometimes we make mistakes, and we have an appeals process for creators who believe their content was incorrectly removed. We constantly evaluate our policies and enforcement guidelines and will continue to consult with experts and the community and make changes as needed.
In addition to removing content that violates our policies, we work to reduce recommendations of content that comes close to violating our guidelines. We also have long-standing advertiser-friendly guidelines that prohibit ads from running on videos that include hateful content. Channels that repeatedly come close to violating our hate speech policies are suspended from the YouTube Partner program, meaning they can’t run ads on their channel or use other monetization features, like Super Chat.