YouTube admitted to having digitally developed the creators’ shorts without their knowledge, according to an increasing wave of confusion of the creator who led to accusations of interference from the ruining videos.
The company said it “experienced” subtle improvements in automatic learning on certain shorts of shorts. The adjustments are supposed to improve the clarity of the videos, but were made without the consent of the creator.
The problem first took note when the musician and Youtuber Rick Beato noticed a clip for his interview with the guitarist of Pearl Jam Mike McCready on YouTube Shorts seemed strange, seeming to have been sent by a filter. He made a viral video on this subject, and many others began to publish what seemed to be similar changes made to their own videos.
Although some of the videos were assigned accusations that YouTube applied AI to videos, YouTube was firm that it was “” automatic learning.
However, whatever the tools used, creators are more upset than their work has been quietly modified in the first place. After weeks of increasing criticism, YouTube says that he is building an opt-out, according to the link from the creator René Ritchie in a post on X.
Creators, we have heard your comments on the unpleasant and debruized YouTube shorts. There are a lot of good things to come in this pipeline, TBH. But if it’s not for you, we are working on an opt-out. Stay listening! https://t.co/tymf0wqvynAugust 26, 2025
AI visions
Despite the comparison of the changes in computer photography, which improves the photos of the smartphone, the key difference is obvious when you are considering the order of events. Smartphones improvements are applied before the user sees the image. In the case of Youtube, the creators had already downloaded and approved their content, which was then changed behind the scenes, without notice.
YouTube’s reasoning is understandable, because shorts are first mobile, rapid scrolling and often visually inconsistent. A little additional varnish could help the more coherent scrolling experience, with lighter videos and a better experience.
But for creators who feel responsible for everything that is displayed under their name, unrecognized changes undermine this creative property. Especially at a time when Ai Fakery already makes viewers more skeptical about what they see on their screens.
For example, Netflix caused a lot of indignation on the “HD remasters” of classic sitcoms as A different world. The implicated AI made distorted faces and strange history, not to mention the posters generated by AI for its content.
The case of Youtube is undoubtedly more delicate. Unlike streaming platforms, where viewers have little control over the product, YouTube is a creative-focused ecosystem. If the platform begins to modify what the creators publish, even with good intentions, this may damage the confidence that makes the entire system work.
The promise of youtube of an opt-out is probably a necessary course correction, but which only came after public pressure. If platforms want to keep the confidence of their users and creators who keep them alive, they must be more transparent, whether it is an AI or simply an automatic learning that seems to imitate AI in the results.