YouTube is developing a new tool called Community Notes to counteract disinformation and provide users more insight. Community Notes is a feature that was inspired by something similar on X. It lets users add brief summaries that provide context or more information about particular films.
The functionality seems to be a lot like Twitter’s Community Notes feature
Currently, only a small number of American users are eligible for the experimental program; invitations will be sent via email or through YouTube Creator Studio. Users must have an active, well-maintained YouTube account in order to participate. YouTube will use “third-party evaluators” to judge how beneficial the notes that users have submitted are at this early stage. The system will be trained using this feedback to make sure that only the most significant contributions are shown to the public.
Viewers will be able to rank the usefulness of Community Notes using a three-tier system: “helpful,” “somewhat helpful,” or “unhelpful” once the pilot goes beyond the initial group. Additionally, they can give detailed justifications for their scores, such as whether the letter is written clearly and concisely or references reliable sources.
Which notes shown under videos will be decided by a special “bridging-based algorithm.” Notes that get high ratings from a wide variety of viewers—including those who hold different opinions—are given priority by this algorithm. YouTube thinks that by taking this technique, the propagation of false information will be reduced, even though misuse is always a possibility.
The fundamental idea behind Community Notes is comparable to a feature that Twitter first offered under Jack Dorsey and then made worldwide under Elon Musk’s ownership. Although not all accuracy problems have been resolved by Twitter’s notes, YouTube seems to think the crowdsourcing method is worthwhile. For consumers in the US, the test program will start on mobile devices. Although a more extensive launch in the US is anticipated in the upcoming weeks and months, YouTube admits there may be hiccups while they work to improve the system.