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YouTube denies AI was involved with odd removals of tech tutorials

From Nomen Nescio <nobody@dizum.com>
Subject YouTube denies AI was involved with odd removals of tech tutorials
Message-ID <84fa1963fe4a8e9ebd7f5d61578b1a99@dizum.com> (permalink)
Date 2025-11-01 09:41 +0100
Newsgroups alt.comp.os.windows-10, alt.comp.os.windows-11, alt.privacy.anon-server, comp.internet.services.google
Organization dizum.com - The Internet Problem Provider

Cross-posted to 4 groups.

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This week, tech content creators began to suspect that AI was making it 
harder to share some of the most highly sought-after tech tutorials on 
YouTube, but now YouTube is denying that odd removals were due to 
automation.

Creators grew alarmed when educational videos that YouTube had allowed for 
years were suddenly being bizarrely flagged as “dangerous” or “harmful,” 
with seemingly no way to trigger human review to overturn removals. AI 
seemed to be running the show, with creators’ appeals seemingly getting 
denied faster than a human could possibly review them.

Late Friday, a YouTube spokesperson confirmed that videos flagged by Ars 
have been reinstated, promising that YouTube will take steps to ensure 
that similar content isn’t removed in the future. But, to creators, it 
remains unclear why the videos got taken down, as YouTube claimed that 
both initial enforcement decisions and decisions on appeals were not the 
result of an automation issue.

Shocked creators were stuck speculating
Rich White, a computer technician who runs an account called CyberCPU 
Tech, had two videos removed that demonstrated workarounds to install 
Windows 11 on unsupported hardware.

These videos are popular, White told Ars, with people looking to bypass 
Microsoft account requirements each time a new build is released. For tech 
content creators like White, “these are bread and butter videos,” 
dependably yielding “extremely high views,” he said.

Because there’s such high demand, many tech content creators’ channels are 
filled with these kinds of videos. White’s account has “countless” 
examples, he said, and in the past, YouTube even featured his most popular 
video in the genre on a trending list.

To White and others, it’s unclear exactly what has changed on YouTube that 
triggered removals of this type of content.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/10/youtube-denies-ai-was-
involved-with-odd-removals-of-tech-tutorials/

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YouTube denies AI was involved with odd removals of tech tutorials Nomen Nescio <nobody@dizum.com> - 2025-11-01 09:41 +0100

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