zlacker

[return to "YouTube caught making AI-edits to videos and adding misleading AI summaries"]
1. Aurorn+Sc[view] [source] 2025-12-06 03:24:52
>>mystra+(OP)
This link is to a Mastodon thread which links to another blog post which links to an actual source on ynetnews.com which quotes another article that has a quote from a YouTube rep. Save yourself the trouble and go straight to that article (although it's not great either): https://www.ynetnews.com/tech-and-digital/article/bj1qbwcklg

The key section:

> Rene Ritchie, YouTube’s creator liaison, acknowledged in a post on X that the company was running “a small experiment on select Shorts, using traditional machine learning to clarify, reduce noise and improve overall video clarity—similar to what modern smartphones do when shooting video.”

So the "AI edits" are just a compression algorithm that is not that great.

◧◩
2. filled+nd[view] [source] 2025-12-06 03:29:23
>>Aurorn+Sc
"Clarify, reduce noise, and improve overall video clarity" is not "just a compression algorithm", what? Words have meanings.
◧◩◪
3. Boreal+Pe[view] [source] 2025-12-06 03:44:20
>>filled+nd
Noise is, because of its random nature, inherently less compressible than a predictable signal.

So counterintuitively, noise reduction improves compression ratios. In fact many video codecs are about determining which portion of the video IS noise that can be discarded, and which bits are visually important...

◧◩◪◨
4. filled+4h[view] [source] 2025-12-06 04:11:15
>>Boreal+Pe
That doesn't make it just a compression algorithm, to me at least.

Or to put it another way, to me it would be similarly disingenuous to describe e.g. dead code elimination or vector path simplification as "just a compression algorithm" because the resultant output is smaller than it would be without. I think part of what has my hackles raised is that it claims to improve video clarity, not to optimise for size. IMO compression algorithms do not and should not make such claims; if an algorithm has the aim (even if secondary) to affect subjective quality, then it has a transformative aspect that requires both disclosure and consent IMO.

◧◩◪◨⬒
5. Boreal+Yp[view] [source] 2025-12-06 06:21:08
>>filled+4h
Perhaps it would raise your hackles less if you read the Youtube comment as "improve video clarity at a particular file size", rather than how you presumably read it as "improve video clarity [with no regard for how big the resulting file is]".

I think the first comment is why they would position noise reduction as being both part of their compression and a way to improve video clarity.

[go to top]