According to Forbes, YouTube is grappling with an influx of AI-generated content following OpenAI's Sora shutdown, raising concerns about deepfakes and platform quality. The video-sharing platform hosts approximately 290 million videos, with AI-generated content accelerating the growth. YouTube CEO Neal Mohan acknowledged the challenge, stating the platform must balance enabling creative use of AI while preventing low-quality spam from overwhelming users.
In response, YouTube announced in May an auto-detection system that labels videos "significantly altered or entirely created by AI," even without creator disclosure. The platform also launched an AI avatar feature in April allowing users to create digital personas. Meanwhile, about one million creators have authorized YouTube to use their content for AI model training—roughly 1.5% of the platform's estimated 69 million active creators. Some external AI companies have offered up to $100,000 per 1,000 hours of creator footage for licensing.