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Over 200 children's rights organizations jointly demand that YouTube fully ban AI-generated "junk content" from entering children's platforms.
Deep Tide TechFlow news, April 02, according to Fortune, more than 200 child rights organizations and experts, including the American Federation of Teachers and the American Consulting Association, jointly sent a letter to YouTube CEO Neal Mohan and Google CEO Sundar Pichai, demanding that the platform fully ban AI-generated low-quality “junk videos” (AI slop) from appearing on YouTube Kids.
The joint letter was initiated by the child rights organization Fairplay. Renowned scholars such as Jonathan Haidt, author of The Anxious Generation, also signed. The letter states that a large amount of AI-produced video content is flooding the YouTube Kids platform. These videos are inexpensive to produce, often absurd or meaningless, yet are designed by algorithms to continuously attract and “hijack” children’s attention. Fairplay’s investigation found that leading AI junk content channels targeting children have annual revenues exceeding $4.25 million, while only about 5% of videos on YouTube Kids aimed at children under 18 are high-quality content.
Rachel Franz, head of the Fairplay project, said that AI-generated content can distort reality, create chaos, and impact children’s cognitive development of the world. Moreover, the platform’s algorithms keep recommending such content to younger users, making it nearly unavoidable for them to be exposed. The coalition proposed several structural reforms, including: a comprehensive ban on AI-generated content on YouTube Kids; clear labeling of AI-generated videos across the entire platform; prohibiting algorithms from recommending AI content to users under 18; providing a default-off parental AI content toggle; and halting investments in AI content projects aimed at children (such as the children’s entertainment studio Animaj supported by Google’s AI Futures Fund).
A YouTube spokesperson responded that the platform maintains strict standards for YouTube Kids content, has limited AI-generated content to a small number of high-quality channels, and is developing a dedicated AI labeling feature, though no specific launch date was provided. YouTube CEO Neal Mohan previously listed “managing AI junk content” as one of the top priorities in his annual public letter.