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YouTube accused of 'violence' against young children over kids' content. YouTube has been accused of “infrastructural violence” against children due to its role in the creation of vast quantities of low-quality, disturbing content aimed at pre-schoolers.

YouTube accused of 'violence' against young children over kids' content

James Bridle, a campaigning technology-focused artist and writer, documented the way the video platform’s algorithmic curation drives enormous amounts of viewers to content made purely to satisfy those algorithms as closely as possible. Bridle highlights videos with names such as “Peppa Pig Crying at the Dentist Doctor Pull Teeth!”

– a pirate Peppa Pig episode in which “she is basically tortured, before turning into a series of Iron Man robots and performing the Learn Colours dance”– and “BURIED ALIVE Outdoor Playground Finger Family Song Nursery Rhymes Animation Education Learning Video”, which is an indescribable mixture of low-quality 3D models of Disney characters, violence, nursery rhymes and surrealism. YouTube to clamp down on disturbing kids' videos such as dark Peppa Pig. YouTube has announced a clampdown on disturbing and inappropriate children’s videos, following accusations that the site enabled “infrastructural violence” through the long-run effects of its content recommendation system.

YouTube to clamp down on disturbing kids' videos such as dark Peppa Pig

The new policy, announced on Thursday evening, will see age restrictions apply on content featuring “inappropriate use of family entertainment characters” like unofficial videos depicting Peppa Pig “basically tortured” at the dentist. The company already had a policy that rendered such videos ineligible for advertising revenue, in the hope that doing would reduce the motivation to create them in the first place.

YouTube: a guide for parents. Online safety resources for parents. Creativity as conversation in the interactive audience culture of YouTube. Creativity as conversation in the interactive audience culture of YouTube: EBSCOhost. Schools must provide a 'moral compass' for young girls, leading headmistress says. The disturbing YouTube videos that are tricking children. Media playback is unsupported on your device Thousands of videos on YouTube look like versions of popular cartoons but contain disturbing and inappropriate content not suitable for children.

The disturbing YouTube videos that are tricking children

If you're not paying much attention, it might look like an ordinary video featuring Peppa Pig, the cheeky porcine star of her own animated series. But soon after pressing play on this particular YouTube clip, the plot turns dark. A dentist with a huge syringe appears. Uk.businessinsider. Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla form a YouTube comedy duo called Smosh.

uk.businessinsider

Melly Lee/Courtesy of DEFY Media YouTube stars are becoming increasingly powerful. They're landing big TV contracts, writing books, and buying million-dollar mansions, all while amassing fan bases numbering in the millions. A new survey from digital content company Defy Media digs deeper into why digital media stars have captured the hearts of young people. In a multi-part study that involved in-depth interviews and social media surveys, Defy Media found 62% of Americans ages 13-24 like digital media just because it makes them feel good. Parents, Something is Terribly Wrong With Many YouTube Videos for Children. Is it safe to turn your children into YouTube stars? By now, you know Zoella.

Is it safe to turn your children into YouTube stars?

When you hear the word “vlogger”, her squeaky-clean, baby-faced brand is exactly what comes to mind. But vloggers are varied. Older, rounder and balder individuals have also amassed millions of views, subscribers, and pounds on YouTube. But they don’t do it by filming 20-minute lipstick reviews. Instead, they film their children. Why YouTube is the new children’s TV... and why it matters. From Minecraft builds to YouTube videos – not to mention YouTube videos of Minecraft builds – children in 2015 have plenty of options for digital entertainment.

Why YouTube is the new children’s TV... and why it matters

YouTube, in particular, has emerged as an alternative to traditional children’s TV – although it’s probably more accurate to say that the two are merging: plenty of popular children’s TV shows are now on YouTube in some form, while to young viewers – many on tablets – it’s all just “video”. With the launch of its YouTube Kids app in the UK and Ireland, the company is hoping to capitalise, but this being YouTube – owned by Google – it’s also kicking up a debate about its motivations, as well as familiar arguments about children and screen time. Is YouTube in the driving seat, or its young viewers? Why 2017–2020 Will be the New #YouTube Golden Era! 20 Things You Need to Know.

I’m constantly asked if it’s too late to start a YouTube channel.

Why 2017–2020 Will be the New #YouTube Golden Era! 20 Things You Need to Know

This question is fascinating to me because my response is typically:“Are you kidding? How are YouTubers influencing children? Dr Tamasine Preece gives insight about the power that YouTubers now have on children who look to them for advice on issues they’re most concerned about.

How are YouTubers influencing children?

Many of the concerns regarding YouTube are not dissimilar from those expressed towards other sites such as Facebook, Instagram and SnapChat. Content can often include strong language and problematic content relating to pornography, hate crime, bullying, self-harm and suicide. Young people who communicate with others via the comment boxes underneath a video can be abused and threatened with violence. To help children stay safe parents should take the time to activate parental locks on all Internet-enabled devices as well as initiating age-restrictions on the young person’s YouTube account. Uk.businessinsider. An October 2016 Influenster survey, which polled US female influencers who are heavy users of at least two social networks, found that 93% of respondents ages 14 to 18 watch product reviews on YouTube, compared to 86% of overall influencers.

uk.businessinsider

In fact, these teen influencers are more likely to watch product reviews than any other type of video on YouTube, with 77% saying they go to YouTube to view such content. Influenster is a network of “tastemaker consumers” who give opinions on products. The group surveyed over 11,000 US female internet users ages 14 to 51 between August and October 2016. In addition to reviews, haul videos (those that feature someone showing and describing products purchased during a recent shopping trip) and unboxing videos (those that feature users unwrapping new products from their packages) are very popular among teen influencers. #VidCon: YouTube Fandom Deserves To Be Taken Seriously. A look inside Australia's first VidCon.

#VidCon: YouTube Fandom Deserves To Be Taken Seriously

On a stretch of brushed concrete the size of a soccer field, two teenagers sit close together. They’re alone in this huge space, away from the crowds. Knees touching, they talk quietly, laughing and painting each other’s nails. This moment of friendship, oblivious to the backdrop of surreal, industrial emptiness, sums up the vibe of Australia’s first ever VidCon. HelloWorld. Is YouTube the new television? YouTube screen grabs here are few certainties in modern broadcasting but Dominic Smales is “100 per cent sure” that he knows one of them: the small-screen stars of the future will be minted on social media. “In a few years it will seem totally outmoded to have a commissioning editor deciding what goes on our television screens and then forcing performers in front of an audience,” he says fervently.

We are talking in a small office in London’s tech district of Shoreditch, out of which Smales, 41, runs Gleam Futures, one of Britain’s first “social talent” agencies, and from where he is determined to shake up the staid world of traditional media. Listening to his strictures about the limitations of scheduled telly it is easy to forget that Smales didn’t start out as a digital revolutionary. A former radio producer, he set up Gleam four years ago with a much simpler objective. ©Jean Jullien. Why YouTube Stars Influence Millennials More Than Traditional Celebrities. Change IRL: YouTuber Stars Who Inspire Change Through Charity Videos. How much change can you enact from the comfort of your bedroom? Probably not much – not when you would rather sleep or surf the internet, spending all day on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr and YouTube.

Then again, there are times when doing something as simple as watching or sharing a YouTube video can help save lives, bring inspiration, and fund humanitarian organizations all over the world. Since its inception in 2005, the world’s largest video sharing site has proved to be one of the most powerful venues for promoting charity campaigns and raising awareness of charitable causes on the planet. YouTuber and New York Times bestselling author John Green describes it as an extremely effective platform for fundraising.

“The structure of the website facilitates community discussion and easy distribution of content,” he said, “whether that’s uploading a video for charity, discussing it in comments, or sharing it to Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook and Reddit.” Life as a Vlogger: What's It Like? We Asked 10 YouTubers. You probably know about the YouTube giants – PewDiePie, Jenna Marbles, the Vlogbrothers – but what about all of the smaller vloggers who make up a huge amount of the content produced on YouTube? 15 Entertaining YouTube Celebrities Worth Watching 15 Entertaining YouTube Celebrities Worth Watching YouTube has changed our idea of what it takes to become a celebrity. You don't really need a skill, with a personality and the ability to entertain and inform an audience the only prerequisites.

Amazon lures YouTube influencers. BI Intelligence This story was delivered to BI Intelligence "Digital Media Briefing" subscribers. To learn more and subscribe, please click here. YouTube influencers can now sign up for Amazon’s Influencer Program, a tool that allows popular social personalities to make money from products they endorse, according to TechCrunch. Until now, Amazon’s program operated in a closed beta, and was limited to personalities with large followings, high-quality content, and high engagement across platforms. Now, Amazon is expanding the beta specifically for YouTube stars, and even though the program is still tightly controlled, the move implies Amazon is bullish on the power of influencer persuasion.

Influencer marketing is a burgeoning form of affiliate marketing, and Amazon is testing what works. 4 YouTube trends to inform your back-to-school ads - Think with Google. Watch time of back-to-school content on YouTube has more than tripled over the past two years.1 If each hour watched in 2016 alone was represented by a pencil, they would stretch from Brisbane, California to Brisbane, Australia and back.2 Our most recent research with Ipsos uncovers the latest shopping trends on YouTube, and what they mean for back-to-school marketing.

Back-to-school shopping isn’t just backpacks and pencils—it’s all of the products a family needs to get ready for the year ahead. And before making those purchases, people turn to video reviews for the information they need. In fact, in the past two years on YouTube, videos with “review” in the title had more than 50,000 years’ worth of watch time on mobile alone.3 Keep in mind there’s more than one kind of video review, so experiment and find what works for your brand. Generation Famous: Growing As A YouTube Star Is Harder Than You Think. Generation Famous: Why You Probably Could Not Be A YouTube Star. 75 per cent of children want to be YouTubers and vloggers. 1. YouTuber - 34.20 per cent 2. Blogger/Vlogger - 18.10 per cent. Untitled.

Untitled. Younger audiences watch more hours of video on YouTube and other digital outlets than TV — simply because they find it more enjoyable and relevant to their lives, according to a new study. Consumers aged 13-24 spend 11.3 hours weekly watching free online video compared with 8.3 hours for regularly scheduled TV, according to a study conducted in the fall of 2014 by Hunter Qualitative Research commissioned by digital-media firm Defy Media.

A major factor driving Internet-video consumption among millennials, per the study: 62% of survey respondents said digital content makes them “feel good” about themselves vs. 40% reported for TV. According to the survey, 67% of millennials said digital delivers content they can relate to vs. 41% for TV, and 66% said they turn to digital content to relax vs. 47% for TV. Dynamics of Modern Communication: The Shaping and Impact of New ... - Patrice Flichy. YouTuber children as young as FOUR are vlogging and finding fame online. Why are YouTube stars so popular? Psychology of sharing: Brits favour visual content. Emotional validation is a key catalyst for frequent posting and sharing social media, with millennials leading the way for posting personal content, according to new research. The study, from visual marketing platform Olapic released the results of a new survey conducted by Morar Consulting that explores the motivations and emotional responses behind sharing on social media among people in the UK.

Polling more than 1,000 respondents aged 16 through 60+ years, results show that respondents regularly share a range of content, with 33 percent posting third party visual content at least once a week.” The poll also reveals interactions with these posts provoke positive feelings of engagement, happiness and acceptance among UK consumers.

“Why is sharing so popular? Among the British, status updates and visual content rank high Over half (54 percent) of respondents share status updates at least once a week, while nearly half (49 percent) do so with their own photos. About the survey www.olapic.com. POSWhitePaper. What Motivates Us to Share Videos? The Psychology Behind Social Video.