Googlenews
Google Admits Using YouTube Videos for AI Training
Abdullah Mustapha
June 22, 2025
Google has affirmed that it uses YouTube videos to train its AI. Although the company asserts that only a small number of videos are used for this, most creators have no clue that their content might be used.
Google Confesses YouTube Videos Used to Train AI – Creators Remain Unaware
The videos help improve Google’s AI offerings, including its Gemini AI algorithm and video creation software, Veo 3. A company representative says that the development of products has never meant excluding the use of YouTube content. They justify the practice has been core to Google’s strategy much sooner than the existence of AI.
Nonetheless, there are questions about transparency. The majority of creators had no idea that their work was in use in this way. There is also a big concern about what is being used and how much.
YouTube contains more than 20 billion videos. Even if Google is making use of only 1 percent of that number, it totals more than 2.3 billion minutes of video. It’s an enormous amount of information.
Google Uses YouTube Videos for AI Training Without Creator Consent
Google insists it has made safety measures. These are designed to prevent unauthorized use of images or voices during AI training. But some experts are not so sure. They believe users should receive accurate information and a say over the use of their content.
The problem is at its root that creators are not able to opt out. Although a Google blog post in September 2023 said that content can be used to “improve the product experience”, this was not made clear to YouTubers. Creators have no controls to stop their videos from being in AI training.
This lack of consent is both ethically and legally problematic. The system threatens intellectual property, and it outrages producers who see their work used without any prior notice.
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Transparency will become increasingly important as AI becomes more integrated into web platforms. Authors and creators deserve to be able to make choices about the use of their work—especially when it helps build powerful new technology.
What’s your take on this move? Should Google be more open about how it’s doing things? Should creators have the option to opt entirely out of AI training? Let us know in the comments below.
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