Why is youtube hiding comments




















Sometimes, comments are hidden not because there is anything wrong, but because they need to be approved. When a video is uploaded to YouTube, the uploader can stop comments from being auto-approved. So, for comments to show up, the uploader of the video will need to manually approve each comment. As I mentioned above, YouTube has spam filters in place designed to stop users and comment bots from mass-commenting on videos.

If a user has commented on an abnormally high number of videos, YouTube will automatically place their comments in the spam folder of videos. When this happens, comments need to be manually approved by video publishers. In years past, people used to mass-comment on YouTube videos. These comments typically contained links to undesirable websites. To combat this, YouTube made it more difficult to publish comments with links in them.

At this point, you might be wondering- is there a limit to YouTube comments? Meaning, is there a certain limit set for the number of comments that a user can leave in a day?

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In March, YouTube announced that it was experimenting with hiding the public dislike numbers , and individual creators have long had the ability to hide ratings on their videos. But the fact that the dislike counts will be disappearing for everyone gradually, according to YouTube is a big deal — viewers are used to being able to see the like-to-dislike ratio as soon as they click on a video and may use that number to decide whether to continue watching.

Now, that will no longer be an option, but it could close off a vector for harassment. That behavior may still continue to some extent, though, as creators will be able to see the dislike numbers for their own video in YouTube Studio.

Other social networks have given users the option to hide rating metrics, too — Instagram and Facebook famously let you hide like counts if you want to avoid the potential social pressure that comes with having your main measure of success on the platform shown to everyone. That particular recap video sparked so much ire that YouTube recently announced that the annual Rewind videos were canceled. Subscribe to get the best Verge-approved tech deals of the week.

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