Abortion: YouTube removes misinformation videos

2 years ago 103
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By Liv McMahon
Technology team

Woman holding a smartphone in front of a YouTube logo displayed on a computer screenImage source, Getty Images

YouTube has said it would remove content promoting unsafe abortions.

Videos including false claims about abortion safety will be included in its misinformation policies, the company tweeted.

YouTube said it will provide factual health information in information panels on termination videos and search results.

US gender justice group UltraViolet says this will help protect public health but tech firms must do more.

Shaunna Thomas, its co-founder and executive director, said immediate action is needed to prevent a "disinformation epidemic" and provide pregnant people with reliable reproductive health information.

She said demand for this has become even more urgent after the reversal of Roe v Wade.

YouTube said its removal of content advising on and promoting unsafe abortion methods had begun on Thursday and would be "ramping up over the next few weeks".

1/ Starting today and ramping up over the next few weeks, we will remove content that provides instructions for unsafe abortion methods or promotes false claims about abortion safety under our medical misinformation policies. https://t.co/P7A27WPYuD

— YouTubeInsider (@YouTubeInsider) July 21, 2022

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Ms Thomas said: "TikTok, Twitter and Meta must follow YouTube's lead, and stop the spread of this dangerous misinformation."

'Life-threatening'

UltraViolet was among more than 200 signatories to a letter sent to YouTube, Meta, TikTok and Twitter earlier this month claiming these companies were "currently enabling, and profiting from, dangerous medical disinformation".

US medical providers and non-profit organisations that signed the letter said content promoting alternatives to approved abortion medication was particularly dangerous and required immediate action from firms.

Posts promoting toxic herbs as a method have been recently seen on social media, raising alarm for medical experts.

The US Food and Drug Administration-approved medications mifepristone and misoprostol are considered to be the safest and most effective medical way to end an unwanted pregnancy.

Image source, Getty Images

The promotion of "untested" abortion methods and theories on social media "is not just unsafe - it's life-threatening", said Ms Thomas.

She added while YouTube's vow to tackle abortion disinformation was a "significant improvement", its criteria for identifying abortion-related medical disinformation should be extended to other Google-owned products.

The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) published a report in June alleging Google Search and Maps were directing some users searching for abortion clinics and information to "fake" clinics.

In so-called "trigger states" where abortion could become illegal following the US Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v Wade, the CCDH's research found 11% of Google searches for abortions led users to clinics promoting alternatives to abortion.

Callum Hood, head of research at CCDH, said tech companies "cannot claim to take abortion misinformation seriously until they tackle the problem in all its forms".

He said this includes acting on misleading adverts for "fake abortion clinics" and content promoting "unproven and potentially unsafe" abortion reversal treatments.

Google has been approached for comment.

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