YouTube offers facial blurring for videos

ERIC GAILLARD/REUTERS - A visitor is seen at the You Tube stand during the annual MIPCOM television programme market in Cannes, southeastern France, October 3, 2011. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

Whether you’re uploading videos of your young child dancing around the living room or of a controversial protest, you may want to keep the identities of the people in your videos under wraps.

YouTube announced Wednesday that it’s introducing a facial blurring tool that will let anyone using the site’s Web video editor obscure the identities of people in their shots. The tool itself is fairly straightforward — users can go to the “Enhancements” tab in the video editor and apply the filter.

Multimedia

Marianne Azakin (L) and Rodrigo Rentaria attend E3, the Electronic Entertainment Expo, in Los Angeles, California, June 11, 2013.    REUTERS/David McNew (UNITED STATES - Tags: SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY SOCIETY BUSINESS)

E3: New games unveiled; Sony sets up battle

Thousands of gaming enthusiasts are coming out for this year’s Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles.

More tech stories

Apple TV brings HBO Go, Watch ESPN to some subscribers

Apple TV brings HBO Go, Watch ESPN to some subscribers

Apple’s set-top box will also have content from Crunchyroll, Sky News and Qello.

Nintendo faces questions over ‘conflict mineral’ policy

Nintendo faces questions over ‘conflict mineral’ policy

Group plans major protest calling for Nintendo to disclose details about its use of conflict minerals.

Having problems with your Netflix? You can blame Verizon.

Having problems with your Netflix? You can blame Verizon.

If you are trying to get Netflix and use Verizon’s broadband, then there is a good chance that your video performance is less than optimal.

The tool won’t work on every face, YouTube said. “This is emerging technology, which means it sometimes has difficulty detecting faces depending on the angle, lighting, obstructions and video quality. It’s possible that certain faces or frames will not be blurred,” YouTube policy associate Amanda Conway wrote in a blog post. “If you are not satisfied with the accuracy of the blurring as you see it in the preview, you may wish to keep your video private.”

The video site said that it was interested in offering the tool because of the growing role that online video plays in social movements and in spreading news events around the world.

A recent study from the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism found that the site plays a important role in spreading news around the world, The Washington Post reported Monday. PEJ Deputy Director Amy Mitchell told The Post’s Paul Farhi, “We’re not saying that people are going to YouTube instead of traditional news sources, but this is a new kind of interaction and a new way of absorbing and learning about events from around the world.”

YouTube said that being able to share news stories is a key reason that it introduced the tool.

“Visual anonymity in video allows people to share personal footage more widely and to speak out when they otherwise may not,” Conway wrote.

Related stories:

YouTube is an important source of video news, says new report

Romney ad pulled from YouTube over copyright complaint from music publisher

YouTube uploads 72 hours of video a minute

Loading...

Comments

Add your comment
 
Read what others are saying About Badges