Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
International

YouTube Working on Removing Harmful Content: Sundar Pichai

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Jun, 2019 10:02 PM
  • YouTube Working on Removing Harmful Content: Sundar Pichai

YouTube has recently made "significant revisions" to its hate speech policy and removed over nine million videos in the last quarter as part of a process to reduce the spread of harmful content, according to Google''s Indian-American CEO Sundar Pichai.


But he acknowledged that the platform was too big to completely fix the problem.


YouTube, which is owned by Google, has come under fire in the last couple of years, as controversial and supremacist content has continued to show up on the popular site despite the company''s attempts to filter it out.


"We work hard to get right, and every few years we feel the need to evolve them because we see changes in how the platform is getting used," Pichai told CNN.


"Just last week, we had significant revisions to our hate speech policy (which) appear(ed) to be very focused on removing harmful content and reducing the spread of what we think of as borderline content," the 46-year-old Indian-American CEO said.


"Just last quarter, we removed over nine million videos. And so, it''s an ongoing process, but there''s more we need to do and we acknowledge that,” Pichai said.


When asked whether there will ever be enough humans to filter through and remove such content, Pichai said, "We''ve gotten much better at using a combination of machines and humans."


"So it''s one of those things, let''s say we''re getting it right 99 per cent of the time, you''ll still be able to find examples. Our goal is to take that to a very, very small percentage well below 1 percent."


"Any large scale systems, it''s tough," Pichai said.


"Think about credit card systems, there''s some fraud in that. ... Anything when you run at that scale, you have to think about percentages," he said.


When asked why it took them seven years to realise that those videos should not be up and ads should not be running next to those videos, Pichai said, "It''s heartbreaking for sure and, all of us would look back and we wish we had gotten to the problems sooner than we did."


"But I think we became aware collectively of some of the pitfalls here... We''ve changed our priorities and we have put in a lot of head front there and we''ll continue to do that,” Pichai asserted.


Responding to another question, Pichai acknowledged that privacy in itself has become a crisis.
"I think it''s very, very - you know, given the scale at which information is flowing, I don''t think users have a good sense for how their data is being used," he said.


"We need better frameworks where users get that comfort that they are in control of their data, how it''s used, and they feel like they have agency over it. And so, I think it''s an important moment for all of us to do better here," Pichai said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children

Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children
Five Canadian families have been granted visas to return home with their newly adopted babies, after being stuck in Japan for weeks due to a bureaucratic impasse.

Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children

21-Year-Old Woman Abducted, Gangraped In Pakistan's Karachi

21-Year-Old Woman Abducted, Gangraped In Pakistan's Karachi
Police said they have launched a probe into the case and two of the suspects have been arrested, while the search was on for the third.

21-Year-Old Woman Abducted, Gangraped In Pakistan's Karachi

Baba Ramdev To Get Wax Statue At London's Madame Tussauds

Baba Ramdev will soon have a wax replica at the Madame Tussauds museum of London.

Baba Ramdev To Get Wax Statue At London's Madame Tussauds

Women All Set To Get Behind The Wheels In Saudi Arabia

Women All Set To Get Behind The Wheels In Saudi Arabia
Women in Saudi Arabia are gearing up to legally drive for the first time starting Sunday.

Women All Set To Get Behind The Wheels In Saudi Arabia

Melania Trump Wears 'I Really Don't Care' Jacket Before Visiting Migrant Kids

Melania Trump Wears 'I Really Don't Care' Jacket Before Visiting Migrant Kids
Melania Trump has surprised the world by visiting child migrants on the US-Mexico border -- but it was her choice of clothing for the trip that stunned the internet: a jacket emblazoned with the words "I really don't care, do you?"  

Melania Trump Wears 'I Really Don't Care' Jacket Before Visiting Migrant Kids

Indian-American Surgeon Appointed CEO Of Amazon-JP Morgan Venture

Indian-American Surgeon Appointed CEO Of Amazon-JP Morgan Venture
Atul Gawande practices general and endocrine surgery at Brigham and Women's Hospital and is Professor at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School.

Indian-American Surgeon Appointed CEO Of Amazon-JP Morgan Venture