Community contributions going away soon
Community contributions will be discontinued across all channels after September 28, 2020. Community contributions allowed viewers to add closed captions, subtitles, and title/descriptions to videos. This feature was rarely used and had problems with spam/abuse so we’re removing them to focus on other creator tools. You can still use
your own captions,
automatic captions, and
third-party tools and services. You have until September 28, 2020 to publish your community contributions before they’re removed.
Your community of viewers can help you reach a larger audience by adding title, description, subtitles, and closed captions to your videos. Once you have same language captions for a video, your community can submit translations to help you reach a global audience.
When content is submitted, you can manage it by reviewing, editing, publishing, flagging, or rejecting it. Your community can also review the content, and it will automatically be published when it gets enough reviews.
Turn community contributions for videos on or off
Before your community can submit titles, descriptions, closed captions, or subtitles, you need to turn on community contributions. You can turn on community contributions for selected videos or make it the default setting for all videos on your channel. Learn how fans contribute and review this content for your videos.
Note: If you have community captions turned on, you’ll have to manually review them before they’re published.
Follow these steps to turn on community contributions for all videos. Note that this change will reset any settings applied to individual videos.
- Sign in to YouTube Studio.
- From the left menu, select Subtitles.
- From the top, select Community.
- Select Turn on.
- Sign in to YouTube Studio.
- From the left menu, select Videos.
- Click the title or thumbnail of the video you'd like to edit.
- From the left menu, select Subtitles.
- If you haven’t, set the language for your video.
- Select the Community Contributions box and choose between On for this video and Off for this video.
Once you've turned on community contributions, make sure to
let your viewers knowthat they can help with reviewing and translating videos.
Manage community contributions
Once transcriptions or translations are submitted, the content goes through a review process. YouTube moderates these submissions for spam and inappropriate content, while getting input from you and your community.
Once enough contributions are added, the community will be asked to help review them. After review, you can publish contributions to show on your videos.
Be sure to carefully review, edit, flag, or reject content before publishing. You can also edit or delete content that's been published.
- Sign in to YouTube Studio.
- From the left menu, select Subtitles.
- Select the Community tab.
- You can take the following actions:
Manage and approve contributions in progress
To see submissions in progress, click “In Review” for a language beneath the “Subtitles” column.
- Approved and publish submissions: At the top of the page, select Publish.
- Edit submission: Click on the text and make any corrections. Changes will be saved automatically when you click outside of the caption you edited. Select Publish to approve.
- Report spam or abuse: Select Report.
- Ask the community to make improvements: At the top of the page, select Needs more work.
Tip: If the translations are in a language that you don't know, check the Google Translation. This translates the community added translation back to the original language.
Give credit to contributors
When you allow community contributions on your channel or video(s), we automatically publish the top contributors in the video's description. Contributors can only get credit if they have a YouTube channel and haven't already opted out of credits.
- The main 5 contributors per language are shown, ranked by their contribution to the published version.
- The contributor list shows in translated versions of the video description (if applicable).
You can also see the list of contributors under the Subtitles & CC tab next to the version they added to.
Note that currently only contributors to subtitles/CCs can be credited in this way.
from Hacker News https://ift.tt/1l7FnjV
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