
YouTube is again facing criticism after it responded to a controversial
video by vlogger Logan Paul.
On Dec. 31, the vlogger published a YouTube video filmed in Japan’s
Aokigahara forest, also known as “suicide forest” due to the large number
of suicides that occur within its boundaries. The video depicted him and
his crew reacting to a dead body hanging from a tree, and showed close-up
shots of the body.
On Jan. 1,
Paul apologized. The next day, he took down the video and issued
a longer apology—which many criticized for displaying ads—and on Jan. 3, Paul said he was
taking a break from YouTube “to reflect.”
In the week following Paul’s apologies, YouTube has largely remained
silent.
“The company issued a short statement to YouTuber Philip DeFranco at the
height of the outrage against Paul, one that many observers felt didn't
really say much at all,”
Syracuse.com reported.
Now, more than a week later, it issued an apology that many say lacked
transparency and action.
On Tuesday, YouTube tweeted the following thread:
The statement didn’t do much to quell the controversy. Journalists
criticized YouTube for not taking responsibility for the situation—along
with not outlining its plans to improve.
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In an article titled, “YouTube offers non-apology over Logan Paul controversy,” TechCrunch’s managing editor Matt Burns wrote:
The
statement spans five tweets and ends by saying the site will reveal steps it’s taking to prevent this
from happening again. But as of publication, Logan Paul’s channel is still
on YouTube, so whatever.
Polygon’s
senior culture reporter, Julia Alexander, wrote an article titled, “YouTube’s open letter regarding Logan Paul is full of excuses, notownership.” In it, she wrote:
Between when Paul’s original video was published on Dec. 31, and the time
it was taken down on Jan. 2, there were a series of events that occurred
that had little to do with YouTube. An age-gate was reportedly instituted
on the video by Paul; the YouTube moderation team
allegedly reviewed the video after receiving a flag and deemed it OK; Paul’s video reached number 10 on
trending without anyone from YouTube taking notice; and then Paul finally
took the video down, not YouTube.
Many YouTube vloggers and viewers attacked the platform’s statement, as
well:
The recent controversy over Paul’s video isn’t a new crisis for YouTube,
which continues to struggle with enforcing its community guidelines. The
recent incident highlights the issue that both the platform and
brand managers face when working with social media influencers.
CNN reported:
YouTube's upload-anything-anytime ethos is constantly being challenged by
the posting of videos containing inappropriate content and even depicting
potentially illegal conduct. The company has at times struggled to enforce
its policies prohibiting violent and gory videos.
"If a video is graphic, it can only remain on the site when supported by
appropriate educational or documentary information and in some cases it
will be age-gated,"
YouTube told CNN Tech when the Paul video first garnered attention.
So, what should be the next steps for a platform facing content controversy
and a struggle with enforcing its policies?
Some say the proper action is to remove Paul from the platform. At time of
publishing, a
Change.org petition calling for YouTube to delete Paul’s channel has garnered nearly 468,000
signatures.
Others say YouTube must strive to be more transparent with how it doles out
consequences and enforces its rules,
which now seem to be arbitrarily handed out depending on the vlogger.
Alexander wrote:
YouTube has a strict set of guidelines that come with clear consequences if
those guidelines are broken. In the case of Logan Paul, because YouTube
deemed his video to be in violation of community guidelines, he should have
received a strike against his channel. This could result in monetization
problems down the road and essentially put Paul on probation in YouTube’s
eyes.
… The most common comparison being used right now is between PewDiePie,
YouTube’s most popular creator, and Paul. When PewDiePie was discovered to
have anti-Semitic imagery in a video, YouTube canceled the second season of
his show, Scare PewDiePie, and doled out a number of other
consequences. In the span of more than a week, YouTube seemingly hasn’t
done anything to Paul’s channel, despite the company’s rules stating
otherwise.
Along with setting a more transparent and fair system of punishment for
breaking its rules, YouTube also can rebuild trust with its community of
creators and viewers by clearly outlining its steps to “ensure a video like
this is never circulated again.”
However, Burns and Alexander said the first step YouTube should take is
owning up to its mistake—which includes explaining how and why it approved
Paul’s video in the first place, and allowed it to garner more than 6
million views before Paul took it down.
“Paul has since apologized a second time, but now the focus must be on how and why YouTube did not remove the
video,” Burns wrote.
“YouTube didn’t “act accordingly” — it didn’t act at all — but the company
will never admit to it,” wrote Alexander.
How would you advise the platform to handle this continuing controversy, PR Daily readers?
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