- On Election Day, YouTube channels — including one with more than 1 million subscribers — livestreamed fake election results to tens of thousands of people.
- Some channels were able to make money from ads via YouTube, as Insider found 3 fake elections results broadcasts that had advertisements playing before them.
- Insider found that the top four videos in the YouTube search results for “Presidential Election Results” were broadcasting a fake graphic displaying an Electoral College projection hours before any state’s polls closed.
- YouTube removed the videos Insider sent the company for violating its policies on “spam, deceptive practices, and scams.”
- Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.
Hours before any state’s polls closed on Election Day 2020, YouTube channels were broadcasting fake election night results to tens of thousands of viewers.
Eight videos out of the top 20 videos in the YouTube search results for “LIVE 2020 Presidential Election Results” showed what appeared to be the same fake results graphics that channels were spamming in an effort to get views and, on three of the channels, made money from advertisements that played before the stream via YouTube ad services.
One of the channels Insider found to be broadcasting fake results had more than 1.4 million subscribers, and four of them were verified channels. Insider also found that the top four search results for “Presidential Election Results” were fake election night results, and search results for “Election Results” also resulted in three of the same fake broadcasts.
None of the channels Insider found broadcasting fake results were affiliated with any political or news organizations; rather, hip-hop and music-related channels were found to be usurping outlets like CBS News and NowThis News in YouTube search results. Three of the top four results for “LIVE 2020 Presidential Election Results” were all misinformation, an Insider search found.
After Insider emailed YouTube with links to three of the fake broadcasts, the platform took down the videos Insider flagged. The platform said the streams violated YouTube’s policies on “spam, deceptive practices, and scams.”
“After careful review, we are removing livestreams that violate our Community Guidelines. We have established policies prohibiting spam, deceptive practices & scams, and we continue to be vigilant with regards to election-related content in the lead-up and post-election period,” YouTube told Insider in a statement.
—Def Noodles (@defnoodles) November 3, 2020
YouTube also added banners to the top of search results about election results that say “Results may not be final. See the latest on Google,” linked to a live counter that showed results were pending.
Before YouTube removed it, the top search result for all of the terms Insider tried, including “Election results,” was a fake broadcast from a channel called Seven Hip-Hop with more than 650,000 subscribers that describes itself as “a community hip-hop channel that works closely with labels and independent artists.” The channel’s most popular uploads are 2Pac songs, one of which has over 380 million views. Its election misinformation livestream was being viewed by more than 26,000 people when Insider contacted YouTube about it.
Seven Hip-Hop’s stream was just a still image with a flashing “LIVE NOW” graphic in the top right corner, but the live chatbox to the right of the stream appeared to show viewers who believed that Biden was winning the Electoral College based on the fake image.
The most common graphic Insider found the channels were using, including Seven Hip-Hop, combined a mock-up 270toWin.com graphic and a falsely edited RealClearPolitics graphic. Slate reported the morning of Election Day 2020 that 270toWin would be “The Hottest Election Night Website” since it allows users to create their own election forecast, clicking on states to adjust the outcome from “safe” to “likely” to “leans” red or blue.
Slate also reported that some users were creating mock forecasts as jokes using 270toWin in the lead-up to Election Day 2020, before YouTube channels used the site’s template to make misinformation graphics.
Other social media platforms created policies in advance of the 2020 election to moderate election results announcements. Twitter, for example, instituted a policy to label tweets that preemptively called 2020 races before an announcement from election state officials or “a public projection from at least two authoritative, national news outlets.”
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