YouTube Limits Weight and Fitness Videos for Teens to Protect Mental Health

YouTube Limits Weight and Fitness Videos for Teens to Protect
YouTube Limits Weight and Fitness Videos for Teens to Protect

YouTube Takes Steps to Protect Teenagers from Harmful Content

In a significant move to safeguard its platform, YouTube has announced that it will restrict video recommendations about body weight, fitness, and physical appearance to teenagers. The decision comes after an advisory committee shared insights about the impact of the platform on the developmental stages of teens.

According to the committee, teenagers are more likely than adults to form negative beliefs about themselves when seeing repeated messages about ideal standards in the content they consume online. This realization has prompted YouTube to take action and restrict certain types of videos from being recommended to minors.

The categories of videos that will no longer be recommended to teenagers include those that compare physical features or idealise one type of feature over others, idealise specific fitness levels or body weights, or emphasize social aggression as non-contact fights and intimidation. This change will be rolled out globally, ensuring that teenagers are protected from harmful content regardless of their location.

YouTube emphasized that while watching a single video of these categories may be harmless, repetitive suggestions can have a harmful impact on teenagers. To address this issue, the company is also improving its Community Guidelines to remove content and prevent minors from seeing videos that breach its policies.

In addition to these measures, YouTube is introducing crisis support resource panels in several countries in Europe. These panels will provide users with support from suicide and self-harm, redirecting them to third-party crisis hotlines if they search for certain queries related to these topics.

The company is also introducing a new supervised experience, allowing parents and teenagers to link their accounts. Once linked, parents can see their teens’ channel activity on YouTube, enabling them to offer encouragement and advice on responsible content creation. This feature is currently under development, but parents will soon be able to link accounts by visiting the new Family Centre hub.

YouTube’s efforts to protect teenagers from harmful content demonstrate the company’s commitment to creating a safe and responsible online environment. By taking these steps, YouTube is acknowledging the potential risks associated with social media and taking proactive measures to mitigate them.

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