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    2024 Social Media Safety Index

    YouTube

    YouTube earns a score of 58, a score improvement of four points

    YouTube earns a score of 58, a score improvement of four points. In a change from last year’s evaluation, YouTube has launched a dedicated feature allowing YouTube creators to add gender pronouns to their channels. YouTube also provides creators with limited options to customize who can see their pronouns, allowing them to choose whether to display their pronouns to everyone or to their subscribers only. However, no disclosure was found that indicates that a similar feature is available for users. The company continues to make a public commitment to taking proactive steps to diversify its workforce, and publishes voluntarily self-disclosed data on the number of its LGBTQ employees.

    The company continues to fall short of providing adequate policy protections for its LGBTQ users in several other key areas. Notably, YouTube is the only company evaluated in the SMSI that has no policy in place that protects transgender, nonbinary, and gender non-conforming users from targeted misgendering and deadnaming. While the company prohibits targeted advertising based on users’ disclosed or inferred sexual orientation or gender identity, no similar disclosure was located that prohibits advertisers from excluding users from seeing ads based on their disclosed or inferred sexual orientation or gender identity. The company continues to provide only limited information regarding the steps it takes to address the wrongful demonetization, filtering, and removal of LGBTQ creators and content from ad services.

    Key Recommendations:

    • Make an express policy commitment to protect transgender, nonbinary, and gender non-conforming users (including public figures) from targeted misgendering and deadnaming: The company should adopt a policy that protects users from targeted misgendering and deadnaming that does not require self-reporting; this policy should also protect public figures, and YouTube should also disclose that it employs various processes and technologies — including human and automated content moderation — to detect content and behaviors violating these policies.
    • Prevent advertisers from wrongfully excluding LGBTQ users from seeing ads: The company should disclose that it does not permit advertisers to exclude users from seeing ads based on their disclosed or inferred sexual orientation and/or gender identity.
    • Show greater commitment to addressing wrongful demonetization and removal of LGBTQ creators and their content: The company should disclose comprehensive information on the concrete steps it takes to minimize wrongful demonetization and removal of legitimate content related to LGBTQ issues from ad services. YouTube should also publish comprehensive data on the wrongful removal of LGBTQ creators and their content.

    More Publications from GLAAD

    Stonewall 50: A Journalist’s Guide to Reporting on the 50th Anniversary of Stonewall and the Legacy of Pride seeks to inform journalists about the history of the Stonewall Uprising and its impact on the LGBTQ movement into the modern day. The guidebook covers several topics: story ideas when covering Stonewall 50, a history of the Stonewall Inn, an overview of significant events in the modern LGBTQ movement, and a focused discussion on the issues the LGBTQ movement faces today– both in the USA and around the world.

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    Fifty years after the Stonewall uprising, the LGBTQ community has great reason to celebrate the many advancements that have created greater visibility and legal protections for LGBTQ Americans, but the fight for 100% acceptance is far from over.

    Last year the Accelerating Acceptance Index, a national survey among U.S. adults conducted on GLAAD’s behalf by The Harris Poll, saw an erosion in LGBTQ acceptance. Although this year’s Index reports that the drop in LGBTQ acceptance has been stemmed, a growing number of young people ages 18-34 report being less comfortable around LGBTQ people in certain personal situations. At the same time, the Trump administration continues to attack the LGBTQ community through discriminatory policies and targeted rhetoric, and LGBTQ Americans are becoming more vulnerable to hate crimes and violence, which GLAAD documents here. GLAAD’s Accelerating Acceptance Report provides us with an urgent reminder that LGBTQ people and allies should continue to remain visible and vigilant on the fight for 100% acceptance of LGBTQ people.

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    The GLAAD Studio Responsibility Index (SRI) maps the quantity, quality and diversity of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) characters in films released by the seven major motion picture studios during the 2018 calendar year. GLAAD researched films released by 20th Century Fox, Lionsgate, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures, Universal Pictures, Walt Disney Studios and Warner Bros., as well as films released by four subsidiaries of these major studios. The report is intended to serve as a road map toward increasing fair, accurate and inclusive LGBTQ representation in film.

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    stay tuned!