youtube | Yesterday was the safe harbor deadline for the U.S. Presidential
election and enough states have certified their election results to
determine a President-elect. Given that, we will start removing any
piece of content uploaded today (or anytime after) that misleads people
by alleging that widespread fraud or errors changed the outcome of the
2020 U.S. Presidential election, in line with our approach towards
historical U.S. Presidential elections. For example, we will remove
videos claiming that a Presidential candidate won the election due to
widespread software glitches or counting errors. We will begin enforcing
this policy today, and will ramp up in the weeks to come. As always,
news coverage and commentary on these issues can remain on our site if
there’s sufficient education, documentary, scientific or artistic context.
Connecting people to authoritative information
While only a small portion of watch time is election-related content, YouTube continues to be an important source of election news. On average 88% of the videos in top 10 search results related to elections came from authoritative news sources (amongst the rest are things like newsy late-night shows, creator videos and commentary). And the most viewed channels and videos are from news channels like NBC and CBS.
We also showed information panels linking both to Google’s election results feature, which sources election results from The Associated Press, and to the Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency’s (CISA) “Rumor Control” page for debunking election integrity misinformation, alongside these and over 200,000 other election-related videos. Collectively, these information panels have been shown over 4.5 billion times. Starting today, we will update this information panel, linking to the “2020 Electoral College Results” page from the Office of the Federal Register, noting that as of December 8, states have certified Presidential election results, with Joe Biden as the President-elect. It will also continue to include a link to CISA, explaining that states certify results after ensuring ballots are properly counted and correcting irregularities and errors.
Additionally, since Election Day, relevant fact check information panels, from third party fact checkers, were triggered over 200,000 times above relevant election-related search results, including for voter fraud narratives such as “Dominion voting machines” and “Michigan recount.”
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