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YouTube now lets you request removal of AI-generated content that simulates 
your face or voice

By Sarah Perez 11:26 AM PDT • July 1, 2024
https://techcrunch.com/2024/07/01/youtube-now-lets-you-request-removal-of-ai-generated-content-that-simulates-your-face-or-voice/


Meta is not the only company grappling with the rise in AI-generated content 
and how it affects its platform.

YouTube also quietly rolled out a policy change in June that will allow people 
to request the takedown of AI-generated or other synthetic content that 
simulates their face or voice.

The change allows people to request the removal of this type of AI content 
under YouTube’s privacy request process.

It’s an expansion on its previously announced approach to responsible AI agenda 
first introduced in November.

Instead of requesting the content be taken down for being misleading, like a 
deepfake, YouTube wants the affected parties to request the content’s removal 
directly as a privacy violation.

According to YouTube’s recently updated Help documentation on the topic, it 
requires first-party claims outside a handful of exceptions, like when the 
affected individual is a minor, doesn’t have access to a computer, is deceased 
or other such exceptions.

Simply submitting the request for a takedown doesn’t necessarily mean the 
content will be removed, however.

YouTube cautions that it will make its own judgment about the complaint based 
on a variety of factors.

For instance, it may consider if the content is disclosed as being synthetic or 
made with AI, whether it uniquely identifies a person and whether the content 
could be considered parody, satire or something else of value and in the 
public’s interest.

The company additionally notes that it may consider whether the AI content 
features a public figure or other well-known individual, and whether or not it 
shows them engaging in “sensitive behavior” like criminal activity, violence or 
endorsing a product or political candidate. The latter is particularly 
concerning in an election year, where AI-generated endorsements could 
potentially swing votes.

YouTube says it will also give the content’s uploader 48 hours to act on the 
complaint.

If the content is removed before that time has passed, the complaint is closed. 
Otherwise, YouTube will initiate a review.

The company also warns users that removal means fully removing the video from 
the site and, if applicable, removing the individual’s name and personal 
information from the title, description and tags of the video, as well.

Users can also blur out the faces of people in their videos, but they can’t 
simply make the video private to comply with the removal request, as the video 
could be set back to public status at any time.

The company didn’t broadly advertise the change in policy, though in March it 
introduced a tool in Creator Studio that allowed creators to disclose when 
realistic-looking content was made with altered or synthetic media, including 
generative AI.

It also more recently began a test of a feature that would allow users to add 
crowdsourced notes that provide additional context on videos, like whether it’s 
meant to be a parody or if it’s misleading in some way.

YouTube is not against the use of AI, having already experimented with 
generative AI itself, including with a comments summarizer and conversational 
tool for asking questions about a video or getting recommendations.

However, the company has previously warned that simply labeling AI content as 
such won’t necessarily protect it from removal, as it will still have to comply 
with YouTube’s Community Guidelines.

In the case of privacy complaints over AI material, YouTube won’t jump to 
penalize the original content creator.

“For creators, if you receive notice of a privacy complaint, keep in mind that 
privacy violations are separate from Community Guidelines strikes and receiving 
a privacy complaint will not automatically result in a strike,” a company 
representative last month shared on the YouTube Community site where the 
company updates creators directly on new policies and features.

In other words, YouTube’s Privacy Guidelines are different from its Community 
Guidelines, and some content may be removed from YouTube as the result of a 
privacy request even if it does not violate the Community Guidelines.

While the company won’t apply a penalty, like an upload restriction, when a 
creator’s video is removed following a privacy complaint, YouTube tells us it 
may take action against accounts with repeated violations.

Updated, 7/1/24, 4:17 p.m. ET with more information about the actions YouTube 
may take for privacy violations.

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