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YouTube CEO opens up about AI slop, and it sounds like cozy promises

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YouTube is in a slightly tricky position right now. On one hand, it’s encouraging creators to use AI tools to make content faster and more easily than ever. On the other hand, it’s also saying it will take action against what it calls “AI slop”, which basically means low-effort, mass-produced videos that don’t offer much value.

That contrast is hard to miss. The platform clearly wants more AI-driven content, but only the kind that feels useful, original, and worth watching, not content that simply fills up space.

So, what are we supposed to take from this?

YouTube CEO, in a NYT video interview, recently said:

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A.I. can be a tool to produce amazing content or further democratize content creation, but it can also allow for the creation of lots of low-quality content. There are aspects of it that are not new. The part that’s new is the scale, but the notion of low-quality content, clickbaity content — we’ve been able to deal with that on YouTube. I also think that we have to have a bit of a delicate hand on this. And I would tell you that every day we’re trying to really strike that balance, but we’re very, very focused on making sure that when you open up the YouTube app, it’s not a feed of A.I. slop.

The real challenge, though, isn’t just accepting that low-quality AI content exists. It’s dealing with how much of it there can be. Platforms have always had to handle mediocre content, but AI changes things completely. What once took time and effort can now be created in huge numbers within minutes. An average video is easy to ignore. Thousands of them, uploaded all at once, become much harder to manage.

Those feel-good words don’t hit the same anymore

“Delicate balance” sounds great, doesn’t it? It’s quite reassuring. But when you actually stop and think about it, the question becomes pretty obvious: what does that even look like in practice? On YouTube, it’s easy to call out the obvious stuff. Fully automated videos, robotic voiceovers — sure, that’s AI slop. But what about the grey area? A video where AI writes the script, edits the clips, designs the thumbnail, and a human just sprinkles a bit of polish on top. Is that smart use of tools, or just low effort dressed up nicely? The line isn’t just blurry, it’s practically moving while you’re trying to draw it.

The platform already leans heavily on algorithms to decide what gets seen and what gets buried. But when uploads start pouring in at scale, even the smartest systems can struggle to keep up. AI content doesn’t arrive with a neat little label saying “I’m generated.” In fact, the more convincing it looks, the harder it is to catch. A lot of it isn’t obviously bad, it’s just…good enough. And that “good enough” quickly turns into a flood.

For years, the platform has rewarded volume. Post more, stay consistent, keep the machine fed. That’s how you grow. And guess what fits perfectly into that system? AI. It lets creators, and let’s be honest, content farms, churn out videos at a scale that just wasn’t possible before. So while the platform says it wants to cut down on low-quality content, the way it’s built doesn’t exactly discourage it either.

To be fair, this isn’t YouTube’s first rodeo. It has dealt with spam, clickbait, and every kind of “hack the system” trick in the book. And it has adapted over time. But AI changes the game. What used to be a manageable problem now shows up multiplied. And that’s really where those feel-good promises start to lose their shine. The intention is there, no doubt. But right now, it feels more like a careful statement than a clear plan. Because spotting the problem is the easy part. The real test is whether the platform can actually keep it under control before your feed turns into a fine line of “just good enough” content.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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