An update to dislikes on YouTube

The Marauder

HAUGH! *SHING*
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Joined
Feb 5, 2021
Dislikes will still be a feature, but they’ll no longer be public.

The dislike count will be private across YouTube, but the dislike button will remain.
At YouTube, we strive to be a place where creators of all sizes and backgrounds can find and share their voice. To ensure that YouTube promotes respectful interactions between viewers and creators, we introduced several features and policies to improve their experience. And earlier this year, we experimented with the dislike button to see whether or not changes could help better protect our creators from harassment, and reduce dislike attacks — where people work to drive up the number of dislikes on a creator’s videos.
We're making the dislike counts private across YouTube, but the dislike button is not going away. This change will start gradually rolling out today.

As part of this experiment, viewers could still see and use the dislike button. But because the count was not visible to them, we found that they were less likely to target a video’s dislike button to drive up the count. In short, our experiment data showed a reduction in dislike attacking behavior1. We also heard directly from smaller creators and those just getting started that they are unfairly targeted by this behavior — and our experiment confirmed that this does occur at a higher proportion on smaller channels.
Based on what we learned, we're making the dislike counts private across YouTube, but the dislike button is not going away. This change will start gradually rolling out today.
Update to YouTube's Dislike Count


Update to YouTube's Dislike Count​


What’s changing for creators and viewers starting today

Creators will still be able to find their exact dislike counts in YouTube Studio, along with other existing metrics, if they would like to understand how their content is performing.
We want to create an inclusive and respectful environment where creators have the opportunity to succeed and feel safe to express themselves.

Viewers can still dislike videos to tune their recommendations and privately share feedback with creators.
We heard during the experiment that some of you have used the public dislike count to help decide whether or not to watch a video. We know that you might not agree with this decision, but we believe that this is the right thing to do for the platform.
We want to create an inclusive and respectful environment where creators have the opportunity to succeed and feel safe to express themselves. This is just one of many steps we are taking to continue to protect creators from harassment. Our work is not done, and we’ll continue to invest here.
 
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At one point there was a website that tracked vote manipulation on (I think) white house videos by monitoring when large batches of dislikes vanished in order to determine the "true" ratio.

Anyone remember what that site was / know if they're still running / know if they have any kind of trickery they can use to keep functioning?
Conservapedia? Ha ha...

Update:
Is this what you were looking for?
Archive: https://archive.md/vC7Y5
 
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This is sad, they couldn’t take the hurtful prospect of digital thumbs down pixels on a screen so they went and removed it altogether, pussies.
Most likely because of ads, for example ad tracking obliterated old ads, be it internet banners, TV or print, because now you could tell which forms of media were actually popular and worth paying to put your products there. Old media is still buttblasted about this so no wonder they demand that to get on youtube this kind of shit has to be hidden from advertisers.

Frankly youtube just signed its death warrant, being a free service they live off ads, nobody is gonna pay for this shit like they do with netflix and its easy af to setup your own. Old media is dying, one single streamer gets more views than CNN on primetime, its pointless to cater to these dinosaurs.
 
Update:
Is this what you were looking for?
Archive: https://archive.md/vC7Y5
Nope, I found the thing via forum search: 81m.org. Looks like they were functioning in August but I can't access them now, so maybe they were already dead and this change will not hinder their ability to (not) operate.

While they were active, this is what they liked like: Archive

That thing you found is interesting though, it tries to look in more detail over less time. Every 80 seconds is persistent. In contrast 81m claimed to do every 10 minutes.

Correction: 81m claims to wait 10 minutes to detect a new video, but rechecks are longer for older videos*

Minor update: Archive.org shows the site functioning October 23rd (I archived the archive at .fo), basically half a month ago. That's much more recent and thunkful.
 
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They are fucking sensitive to critique these You Tube whores need to slowly get lower and lower returns so they go away. In addition, they can now lie and stir up drama saying they are getting massive dislikes but now you cant see just how many. Looking at you Chantal, DSP and Amberlynn.
All these fucks say the same shit " I dont do this for the money" Sure, Jan. Let's see how many videos you shit out once you dont have that money rolling in.
 
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