- Content source
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-26043794
The video-sharing website YouTube said it has started to "audit" the number of views a video has received.
The move is aimed at preventing users from artificially inflating view counts which, YouTube said, mislead people about the popularity of a video.
There are concerns that some viewers are using tools like "redirects" or "buying" views to boost their count.
YouTube said it will now "periodically" validate the views on videos and remove the fraudulent ones from the total.
"Some bad actors try to game the system by artificially inflating view counts. They're not just misleading fans about the popularity of a video, they're undermining one of YouTube's most important and unique qualities," Google, which owns YouTube, said in a blogpost.
"While in the past we would scan views for spam immediately after they occurred, starting today we will periodically validate the video's view count."
However, the firm said that it does not expect the new approach to affect "more than a minuscule fraction of videos on YouTube".
Read more: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-26043794
The move is aimed at preventing users from artificially inflating view counts which, YouTube said, mislead people about the popularity of a video.
There are concerns that some viewers are using tools like "redirects" or "buying" views to boost their count.
YouTube said it will now "periodically" validate the views on videos and remove the fraudulent ones from the total.
"Some bad actors try to game the system by artificially inflating view counts. They're not just misleading fans about the popularity of a video, they're undermining one of YouTube's most important and unique qualities," Google, which owns YouTube, said in a blogpost.
"While in the past we would scan views for spam immediately after they occurred, starting today we will periodically validate the video's view count."
However, the firm said that it does not expect the new approach to affect "more than a minuscule fraction of videos on YouTube".
Read more: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-26043794