YouTube has banned two major Al-False Film Festivals, over 2 million subscriptions and 1 billion playouts.

According to Deadline’s exclusive disclosure, YouTube has closed two well-known channels (Screen Culture and KH Studio) that use artificial intelligence to forge a movie trailer, both of which have over 2 million subscribers, with a cumulative number of over 1 billion playouts, and the current page displays “Sorry this page is not available, try searching for other content”. Earlier this year, YouTube suspended its advertising revenue function for both channels following a Deadline investigation into the proliferation of false film alerts for the generation of a post-Ai platform. Since then, the channel has restored profits by adding to the video title “Face fan preview” “honorful” “concept preview”, but these waivers have disappeared again in recent months, raising concerns among the community of home-made trailers.

Official YouTube stated that the channel had resumed its previous operating pattern in violation of its “waste information and misleading metadata policy” and decided to ban it. A YouTube creator commented on this: “The monster has finally been subdued.” According to the Deadline survey, Screen Culture produces a series of film trailers that defraud a large audience by collating official images with AI-generated images. Its founder, Nikhil P. Chaudhari, revealed that the team had successfully used YouTube algorithms through a strategy to pre-empt the publication of false premonitions and continuous inverted video. As of March of this year, for example, the channel had produced a false premonition for the 23rd edition of ” Wonder Four: The First Splash ” , some of which were ranked even above official prognosis in the YouTube search results. Recent cases also include the new HBO ‘ s Harry Potter episode and Netflix ‘ s false advance.

Deadline also revealed that a small number of Hollywood studios, including Warner and Sony, did not demand the protection of these video copyrights, but rather privately requested YouTube to direct the advertising revenues from high-AI content videos. Disney IP content appeared on the Screen Culture and KH Studio channels in large numbers, while Disney sent a restraining notice to Google last week alleging a “massive” copyright violation of its AI training model and services.

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