"When you're just showing raw visual stimuli and bombarding a kid with it, it just doesn't seem it's probably that good for them." The post YouTube Filling With Horrifying AI Slop for Children ...
AI-generated slop accounts for 21% of YouTube Shorts shown to new users. Here's what this means for marketers and where your content is most protected.
YouTube has banned a number of channels uploading AI-generated content after an investigation from the New York Times into ...
After watching popular children’s channels like CoComelon, Bluey, or Ms. Rachel, The New York Times found that more than 40 percent of Shorts recommended by the platform “appeared to contain ...
A new investigation reveals YouTube's algorithm floods kids' feeds with bizarre AI videos after trusted channels, while creators profit from the synthetic content with millions of views.
It’s not just bad content; it’s dangerous. Experts issued a warning about “AI slop” on YouTube that could permanently impact how your child sees the world. PEW study shows rising YouTube use among ...
In the digital landscape of 2026, AI-generated content is everywhere, but YouTube intends to use AI to reduce the flow of slop. In his annual letter to the creator community, YouTube CEO Neal Mohen ...
Retention analysts say Shorts older than 28-30 days are being deprioritized in recommendations. The reported shift affects channels ranging from 100 million to one billion monthly views. Creators warn ...
AI-generated “slop” has overtaken YouTube, accounting for more than 20% of videos recommended to new users and generating an estimated $117 million in annual revenue from over 63 billion views.
You open YouTube Shorts while waiting for your coffee. A couple of videos, you think. Thirty minutes later, you're still scrolling. The brain is buzzing, time is gone. YouTube Shorts isn't just a ...