【Cheating wife movies】
YouTube’s recent spate of bad headlines won’t hurt its bottom line.
The Cheating wife moviesvideo site is facing yet another advertiser exodus after the Times of Londonrevealed that big-brand commercials were appearing alongside content that sexualizes children. The news comes months after ads on terrorist and hate group videos spurred a similar boycott spanning hundreds of major businesses.
SEE ALSO: Fake news, child abuse, and jihadist recruiters: How YouTube's reckoning arrivedAnd that's not all. YouTube has also been under fire for hosting disturbing content that found its way into the YouTube Kids platform, as well as videos that show child abuse.
This all might sound like a disaster for YouTube-parent Google, and, public-relations-wise, it is. But like the earlier advertiser flight, it will have negligible financial impact on the company.
In that respect, Google and YouTube are simply too big to fail.
Consider a few of the biggest brands that opted to freeze ad spending on YouTube this week: Mars candy, Adidas, and Hewlitt-Packard. They’ve spent $6.9 million, $7.9 million, and $1.7 million respectively on the platform in the past year, according to data from research firm Pathmatics reported in AdAge.
That’s peanuts to the $252 million Google netted from YouTube’s desktop site since September alone, the firm says.
The search giant had a much bigger backlash on its hands this spring. That boycott encompassed some of the world’s biggest consumer advertisers like Procter & Gamble, Verizon, and Johnson & Johnson. More than 250 companies joined, all told.
Even that crisis failed to make a dent on the company’s balance sheet, though. Many of those businesses are back now and revenue from the platform continues to power Google’s growth.
Google has nevertheless deleted 150,000 of the offending videos this week and removed ads from 2 million more. It once again promised to double down on policing the billions of hours of user video that pours onto its site every day.
“Content that endangers children is abhorrent and unacceptable to us,” a Google spokesperson told Vice News.
The company has indeed cracked down on questionable ad placements in the months since the first boycott, though some video creators have complained that its policies haven’t been applied even-handedly.
It would also seem that YouTube hasn't been terribly proactive on this. The company has been developing artificial intelligence that has helped crack down on extremist videos on the platform, but other issues are only addressed once they make headlines.
The whole debacle has fed mounting fears among marketers that big digital platforms have grown too powerful for their liking. Tensions between Google and Facebook, which hold a duopoly over the digital ad industry, and the advertisers that patronize them have come to a head in recent months. Marketers have become more vocal over a variety issues including the black-box means by which their ads are measured, rampant fraud, and failures to guarantee ads will appear in a respectable environment.
Brands have come to the conclusion that the only way to hold any sort of leverage is to join forces.
"The days of giving digital a pass are over," Marc Pritchard, marketing chief of the world’s biggest advertiser, P&G, said in January. "It's time to grow up. It's time for action."
Pritchard also issued an ultimatum: Digital ad sellers must accredit their measurement techniques with the third-party Media Ratings Council by the end of the year or face a loss of business.
With one month remaining, though, the biggest platforms haven’t done much to meet those demands. And no other marketers have followed Pritchard’s lead on the deadline.
Still, Pritchard claims that his threat has had an effect. He blames the lack of action on the accreditation agency’s limited capacity to audit companies.
“We’ve already voted with our dollars and we’ll continue to do so,” he said on stage at a recent industry conference. “We’ve made tremendous progress.”
But incidents like these show the limitations of those votes. Brand boycotts might be enough to push YouTube to take relatively painless steps to appease PR concerns. But it has much less financial incentive to act if anything more substantial is on the line.
Featured Video For You
This bizarre YouTuber has the entire internet wondering where she came from
Topics Google YouTube
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
First look at Samsung's sleek Galaxy Watch Active
2025-06-27 09:19Singapore Airlines passengers have a camera pointed at them
2025-06-27 08:28How to unblock Pornhub for free in Alabama
2025-06-27 08:04Popular Posts
VidCon 2025: Creators share their mistakes and lessons learned
2025-06-27 09:15Melania Trump threatens to sue 'People' over sexual misconduct story
2025-06-27 08:385 apps to help anyone better manage their mental health
2025-06-27 08:275 apps to help anyone better manage their mental health
2025-06-27 08:17How to Get Your Significant Other Into Gaming
2025-06-27 07:59Featured Posts
Trump who? Tech giants join massive effort to uphold Paris Agreement
2025-06-27 09:30LG says it's 'too early' for foldable phones
2025-06-27 09:18Bust out the GIFs, the New York Times just gave Trump a legal burn
2025-06-27 08:03Australian Open 2025 livestream: Watch live tennis for free
2025-06-27 07:44Popular Articles
A NASA rover just conquered a treacherous climb on Mars
2025-06-27 09:43Urban Outfitters is selling random VHS tapes for $40
2025-06-27 08:49Best Dyson deal: Save over $100 on Dyson V11 Origin cordless vacuum
2025-06-27 07:08Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (923)
Sharing Information Network
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for January 16: Tips to solve Connections #115
2025-06-27 09:37Happiness Information Network
The surprising list of top Netflix shows in the US by state
2025-06-27 09:17Prosperous Times Information Network
Zayn Malik is totally psyched he can sing about sex after leaving One Direction
2025-06-27 09:17Exploration Information Network
Star Wars fans, lightsaber dueling is now an official sport in France
2025-06-27 08:48Prosperous Times Information Network
Dating app happn launches AI
2025-06-27 08:31