https://genr.eu/wp/youtube-fix-your-ai-for-climate-change-an-invitation-to-an-open-dialogue/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

YouTube — Fix Your AI for Climate Change! An Invitation to an Open Dialogue
Joachim Allgaier Joachim Allgaier
1 day ago

Ganges River Delta
Ganges River Delta

Image: Ganges River Delta. Image provided by the USGS EROS Data Center
Satellite Systems Branch. Caption adapted from text provided by NASA’s
Earth Observatory. Source: NASA/USGS Landsat 7; NASA Earth Observatory.
>From NASA Climate YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/user/NASAClimate

An interview with Joachim Allgaier on his recently published study on how
social media platforms such as YouTube have become hostile to climate
science. When you search around climate change on YouTube the results are
50/50 climate science versus anti-science Chemtrails conspiracy theories.
YouTube and Google Scholar have been strategically hijacked by groups
posting anti-science content, while at the same time academia has neglected
to use YouTube and recognise it as the vitally important channel for their
scientific voices to be heard. The interview is a call for scientists to
actively engage with the platform and for YouTube to reflect the values put
forward by its CEO and Google co-founder Susan Wojcicki of an appreciation
of the scholarly environment within Silicon Valley. These values could be
actioned in YouTube’s AI to favor scientific factual content and by
adopting Open Science practices of enhanced transparency across its
platforms as anti-science Chemtrails content is also immediately found in
search results on Google Scholar. Open has worked for Google’s support of
its technology stack with open source, why not apply the same workings to
its search indexing, dare it be said by applying a little open library
science.

Open Science & Climate Change
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DOI

10.25815/xc8d-hg97
Published Study

Allgaier, Joachim. ‘Science and Environmental Communication on YouTube:
Strategically Distorted Communications in Online Videos on Climate Change
and Climate Engineering’. Frontiers in Communication 4 (2019).
https://doi.org/10/gf8rst.

Simon Worthington, GenR (SW): First off could you introduce yourself and
your area of study?

Joachim Allgaier (JA): My name is Joachim Allgaier. I have a background in
sociology, and moved into science communication and technology studies, so
quite an interdisciplinary background. To cut a long story short, I’m
really interested in studying the interface between science and society.
I’m based at RWTH Aachen University the biggest technical university in
Germany, working at the Chair of Society and Technology at HumTec the Human
Technology Center an interdisciplinary research institution.

SW: We’re here to discuss your paper ‘Science and Environmental
Communication on YouTube: Strategically Distorted Communications in Online
Videos on Climate Change and Climate Engineering’ published this July
(2019) in the journal Frontiers in Communication, which you could boil it
down to say is looking at the representation of Climate Change in social
media and specifically YouTube. A good place to start would be to ask you
to unpack the title of the paper, which looks like it breaks down into two
parts?

JA: First of all I wanted to do something on YouTube because most of the
science communications research is focused on other portals, particularly
Twitter. This is because it is easier to study, you have these small
segments of text and functions on the website where you can aggregate the
data and sampling is really easy. Whereas, studying YouTube is somehow more
challenging, in terms of methods and you also have more elements, not just
text. You have: stats, audio, video, imagery, discussions, stories, and all
kinds of different elements.

Also the reason I wanted to study YouTube is that the reach of YouTube is
many times higher than the reach of Twitter. YouTube is available
worldwide, with almost two billion users, which is impressive. We know from
reception studies and user statistics from various surveys that many people
say that they get much of their knowledge of science and technology from
YouTube. My idea was to come up with a systematic way of studying content
on YouTube so at least we could have an idea of what the people might find
on YouTube. This is covers the first part of the paper’s title.

The second part of the title ‘Strategically Distorted Communications’ this
is the last part of the paper where I look at the results of the sample of
videos on YouTube when you look for climate related issues, where you don’t
necessarily find scientifically correct information but also a lot of
conspiracy theories videos. If you look for the big climate terms like —
climate change, climate science, or global warming — you mostly find
scientifically correct information. If you move a bit further away from
these terms, if you start to look into climate manipulation, or
geo-engineering then content tagged with these terms is totally infested
with conspiracy content and there is actually a strategy behind it.
Importantly these are all the issues that need to be discussed pretty soon
and that the IPCC is discussing as something we might need to do when we
don’t manage to reach the emission targets. Somebody created a strategy,
somebody was thinking about how can we manipulate the mechanisms of YouTube
that people find our anti-scientific content and not the actual story that
a scientist might tell you about what geoengineering is for instance.

SW: In the paper’s introduction you highlight the enormous challenge of
climate change, the work of IPCC, and how climate change will affect us —
as well as the importance of communicating these issues to the public. It
would be good to hear about your motivations for the interest in climate
change and the need for information for the public?

JA: My interests started many years ago, you can see from the samples in
the paper the work started in 2014/15. It took some time to get to the
review and changes needed to be made before it could be published. Back
then climate change was an important topic and it was recognised that
something had to be done — especially to the scientists, but it wasn’t so
pressing as it is today and not so controversial. With the introduction of
the strategies of fake news and a post-truth more and more challenges (Cook
et al. 2019) were mounted to the consensus on climate change. When studying
YouTube I did not expect it to be so divided. I expected when looking for
some terms I thought something controversial might come up and I was
interested in what the ratio that might be, would it be 1/3 or 1/4 of
videos that might have incorrect information, or unclear depiction of what
climate change is, I wasn’t expecting that they would deny climate change.
But the more I go into it, the more this clear pattern emerged and I
realized there is a serious problem, not so much with the big terms, but
rather with the related ones like ‘climate modification’, ‘geoengineering’,
etc.

Back then I was reading the literature on conspiracy theory and I could see
that various conspiracy theorists have done the same with different terms,
for instance my colleague René König has written about the ‘truthers’ who
don’t believe in the 9/11 tragedy and they are encouraged to look on the
web for a particular term (e.g. WTC-7) (König 2013). There have not been so
many pages on the web referring to this particular term so it could be
taken over so that people will then be directed to the conspiracy websites.
Reading the literature from the Geoengineering community, they also
reported these attacks coming from the Chemtrails side. At their
conferences they have activists there and the situation for them has at
times got very serious. For most of us if we hear about Chemtrails we
wouldn’t take it seriously, but according to a survey carried out in the US
around 1/3 of the population in the US (Tingley and Wagner 2017) now
believes in Chemtrails.

SW: It would be really interesting to hear about the process of the
research, when it started and what methods and tools were that you applied?

JA: The research was started several years ago, but I was always interested
in the question what might different user find if they really used YouTube
as an information source for scientific or medical issues. Until then
absolutely no work had been conducted about science communications on
YouTube, with some conducted on health communication. What the researchers
did there was to pick the 100 most viewed videos on a particular condition
or disease and then a team of medical experts assesses the medical accuracy
and said whether something is medically correct or not. This was the method
used so far, but this method doesn’t address the question of what a user
would find individually.

I had been making quite an effort to find out how I can study content on
YouTube that is not just my own filter bubble. I wanted to know what
different users might find. Eventually I found that the Tor tool could be
used in the research, which re-routes your web browser, you can use
different end users, IP addresses, different persona — basically each time
you use the web you have a new identity. You still have filter bubbles, but
they’re other people’s bubbles. I ran the searches several times, each with
different personas. This is the major innovation.

Then I picked ten terms, first the really big terms like — global warming,
climate change, climate science — and already back then there was the fear
that the emissions targets might not be reached and that methods like
climate or geoengineering would need to be used to remove greenhouse gases
from the atmosphere. These fields are new epistemic communities within
science and have not been applied yet. It is extremely risky technology
because it can only be used on a global scale. But as soon as you type in
the phrase ‘geoengineering’ into YouTube you are almost immediately
directed to Chemtrails and conspiracy theories (Wagner n.d.). This is
because a big effort is made in strategically occupying these terms, so
that people do not find the real scientific information there, and this
might have something to do with trying to undermine the trust with science
as a whole.

This is also the reason I wanted to include the term Chemtrails as I wanted
to see what happens if I type in Chemtrails into YouTube — is it just
Chemtrails coming up or is it also debunking videos coming up, say from the
science side, or say other civil society actors who say ‘hey this is just a
stupid conspiracy, don’t believe in that because there’s no evidence for
it’. Because from the scientific side there are actually surveys (Shearer
et al. 2016) that none of the scientists who work with this stuff actually
believes in Chemtrails. From the point of view of science it is quite clear
that there is no evidence base for the Chemtrails theory.

This is the reason why I picked these different terms. Then I repeated the
search with different identities from different Tor users, this is where it
gets opaque as well as we can’t really look into Tor, what is happening
inside there. I can just see that by using it, I have a different profile
now, a different end node in a different country and so on. So I have got
an idea basically of what types of video and content comes up if I search
for particular terms. The main question for me was, does the message of the
videos stick or adhere to these scientific consensus view of climate
change, or not, or is it something completely beyond that like a conspiracy
theory.

SW: I wanted to ask about the viewing figures that came out of your study
and what can be read from the search results of the 200 videos, with 89
supporting the consensus about anthropogenic climate change, 4 being
discussions between the two disagreeing camps, and with 107 opposing the
scientific consensus? But also how the number of views in each camp were
almost identical, with only a difference of about 2,000 views between them
— with the science views receiving 16,941,949 and the skeptic position
receiving 16,939,655 views in total?

JA: If you would remove a few items like the comedian John Oliver’s videos
then the climate denying content would have won in terms of views. So what
we can learn from these figures is that the conspiracy theorists have done
a really good job in terms of achieving their goals. Also it is mainly
media content that is found supporting the scientific consensus position
and very little from scientists, and so the lesson learned here is that it
is the scientists and science communicators that have done a really bad job
of recognizing this medium as important — being present, producing content,
and taking this super influential communications channel seriously. So,
when I talk with members of the science community I encourage them to make
use of it as it has enormous reach, especially among young people. Many
YouTubers tell me that their followers generally don’t watch TV, they don’t
read newspapers and that YouTube is their prime information channels — and
if you’re not present there you will simply not exist for them. And this is
why I would also encourage people who are doing research on climate or
geoengineering to work together with some people who know how to use this
medium well, have a collaboration with a YouTuber, and get them to talk
about your point of view, because if you don’t take care of this someone
else will present their point of view and you simply won’t be heard.

SW: I wanted to ask about the details of the strategies at play by the
climate skeptic groups looking to disseminate their content. In your paper
you talk about examples like flooding, producing content from multiple
sources designed to take over search rankings. Recently I attended the
Video Vortex Conference about the aesthetics and politics of online video.
There I learned that these groups who have an agenda to push on YouTube
have sophisticated operations: not only understanding SEO and media
strategies, but also being able to directly fund their operations out of
YouTube’s revenue share programme. So I would be really interested to hear
about a strategy breakdown of the climate skeptic YouTube channels?

JA: What is striking is how these two terms ‘climate engineering’ and
‘geoengineering’ have been targeted. If you browse around on the Chemtrails
conspiracy websites you will find a call to action with the warning notice
‘not to use the term Chemtrail when posting as this is associated with
conspiracy theorists and to instead use different tags, specifically
climate engineering and geoengineering’. Also they chop up videos and use
them in various chunks flooding all sorts of channels. This is important as
its manifest evidence of the strategy. Another strategy is to attack the
scientists, if you read the comments under scientific YouTube videos,
especially people talking about climate change, the comments are sometimes
extremely violent and aggressive. Under YouTube community guidelines they
should be removed but sometimes they seem to slip through.

If we zoom out of YouTube and look for example at Google Scholar under
searches for Chemtrails you will not see scientific literature but instead
Google Scholar directs you to the websites of the Chemtrails theory people.
This is really horrible for Google Scholar pretending to be an academic
database when it actually directs you to the most anti-scientific websites
you can imagine. This is why I have become quite skeptical about Google and
YouTube because I have tried to have a dialogue with Google, we have
invited them to conferences, they have never really replied. Instead have
just replied in relation to my work as it was picked up in the press —
where Google press people have said that the sample is really old, that
they have adapted YouTube, and that there is no problem anymore. This is
easy for them to say and if the journalist or scientists asks them to tell
them about the changes then they don’t receive an answer.

My solution would be to say we need more independent research to be able to
verify whether if it is true what they say. Because I’m not willing to
simply believe what they are telling us all the time because the climate
skeptic videos are generating traffic and this is what YouTube runs on.
Additionally some of the videos contain merchandise advertising and this
points to there being an economy with its relationship to ‘fake news’ where
people got the idea if you created outrageous stories people would click on
them and that this is a way to make money. But this has really bad side
effects for all of us and I think this is a matter of responsibility for
YouTube.

SW: I started out this interview as a Google and YouTube skeptic and remain
so as we still don’t have the levels of transparency that are needed to
take any other position, but I appreciate that it’s a complex situation.
Starting with Google, where are we at with Google and regulation and
controls? Are there any controls over YouTube from the scientific
community, institutions, and their supporting government bodies? The status
quo appears to be that there is no regulation, accountability, or
transparency. Also this problem of disinformation must be affecting a whole
variety of sectors, as you mentioned with healthcare, but it can literally
be anything else: a local city issue, economics, culture, or essentially
anything that can be hijacked?

If we were dealing with public service broadcasting or broadcast media
there is more regulatory control: gatekeepers, media organization, or
parliamentary control, is YouTube being brought into those frameworks?

JA: So far they have been very good at avoiding these regulation issues,
because of the international nature of this platform. The main angle by
which the platform was grasped was by the copyright issue, especially in
the EU. But whether content is true or not, or harmful or not are not
covered unless it relates directly to harming someone, if people are asking
for someone to be hurt. And then there is borderline content, which is
notoriously difficult to regulate and this is how they have got off the
hook, most of the time.

What is interesting is that Germany and France in the Treaty of Aachen (Jan
2019) agreed to make their own state run AV platform, a public service
YouTube. It was tried before with the EU Search Engine and this didn’t fly.
Even if they can get it running the question is how do they get the people
to this other platform from YouTube. But we have to think about
alternatives like this as YouTube has just become too powerful and too big
— even if we criticize it, it doesn’t matter.

By the way have you heard of that Extinction Rebellion occupied offices of
YouTube (Oct. 2019) as they really wanted to attack YouTube for spreading
all this misinformation on climate change and funnily enough they referring
my paper on their Extinction Rebellion website.

SW: Is there awareness of these issues in Governments. What are the ideas
that are available to bring about transparency, could we have a simple
things like a library catalog classification of videos, an inventory. But
obviously it’s part of YouTube’s business model to not let people know what
it holds and only show a temporary glimpse of what they have available AKA
a search result?

JA: There is an awareness of hate speech so this is why Germany and France
came up with an idea of a public platform, but they don’t know how to
regulate something like this. If you use YouTube you have to completely
rely on the algorithm that is gives you want you want. Their AI is one of
the most powerful algorithms in use, just think of the incredible amount of
data generated by the videos, by the users, the traffic, this is where the
deep learning mechanisms learns. How users behave, what happens if I feed
them right wing content, conspiracies, etc., do they stick watching? Back
in the days when they started the whole deep learning exercise the
algorithm just had to keep people watching, no matter what, even if its
harmful content. Then advertisers said we don’t want to have our ads
associated with extremist content and this is the reason they made changes
by removing content.

SW: So maybe they need to be understood as what they are an advertising
company reliant on an economy of attention, so only things affect that
bottom-line mean anything to them?

JA: If you listen to the YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki speak, she stresses
that she grew up in the Silicon Valley surrounded by all these academics
and professors, that she values and appreciates having all these creative
minds around her. If this is her attitude I would like to see this
reflected in how YouTube as a technology works: that it prioritizes
factually correct information, especially about medicine and controversial
scientific subjects, let’s say vaccination or climate change. It’s not a
big deal to tweak the algorithm to do this, it’s just a question of whether
it’s profitable for them and this is where the problem comes in.

If at some point they would actually really make that step, to say — look
this is our culture, this is where we come from, we come from Silicon
Valley with all these academic enterprises and so on, and we want to
transport this spirit — then this would be a wonderful step. This is
something I would like to hear, but unfortunately I cannot see that they
act according to this spirit. This is the problem I have they seem to have
lost this progressive spirit.

SW: So a concluding question would be how can researchers, scientists, or
institutions engage with these questions. As on other topics you can find
interesting YouTube content, I think of something like Sixty Symbols in
physics and astronomy from the University of Nottingham in the UK. What
would be your request or recommendation for creating content for YouTube?

JA: Scientists no matter what they are working on should treat YouTube
seriously as a communications channel. They don’t necessarily need to post
videos themselves, but they should consider working together with someone
who knows how to deal with this medium. Normally every university or
institute has a press person or a science communicator on board. Also in
regards to subjects they talk about they should look on YouTube and see
what content is there, if it’s good then OK, if not why not post a video
that points to what is going on in their field from a scientific point of
view.

In my field of study I have been disappointed to see that most of the
research has been conducted on Twitter or newspapers for controversial
topics, but very little on platforms like YouTube. Also there are many new
visual channels, like Instagram for young people, and for really young
people things like TikTok, which uses very short clips. Now that these
platforms are emerging we should immediately start monitoring what is
happening on these sites, especially when it comes to conspiracy theorists
and extremists content.

Thinking of people from libraries, archives, or scientific academies, why
not have something like a label for videos or channels where it could say
this is scientifically approved and this is a good channel if you want to
know about topic X, so you have an indexing with a scientific quality mark
and this could be on YouTube. Many universities have YouTube channels but
they are mainly used to distribute image brochure videos and by doing that
they are not really educating people but instead they are destroying their
reputation and people will not watch this and think it’s not worthwhile,
this is just advertisement for the institution, I don’t learn anything and
why should I go to that site. Instead they should think about different
types of collaborations, with other institutions, or with YouTube to reach
their followers.

SW: On the labelling for scientifically approved content I think you’re
totally right something should be worked out and there are in existence
already an array of tools that could be combined to index content or
provide a label: for adding persistent identifiers with DOIs, personal and
institutional identifiers with ORCiD, blockchain cryptographic IDs, as well
as web crawlers such as the prototype My Research Institute that can go out
on behalf of an institution and harvest content from a variety of platforms
like YouTube and other platforms.

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