YouTube

Report September 2025

Submitted

Executive summary


Google’s mission is to organise the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. To deliver on this mission, and as technology evolves, helping users find useful, relevant and high-quality information across our services is of utmost importance. 

Since Google was founded, Google’s product, policy, and content enforcement decisions have been guided by the following three principles:

1. We value openness and accessibility: We lean towards keeping content accessible by providing access to an open and diverse information ecosystem.

2. We respect user choice: If users search for content that is not illegal or prohibited by our policies, they should be able to find it.

3. We build for everyone: Our services are used around the world by users from different cultures, languages, and backgrounds, and at different stages in their lives. We take the diversity of our users into account in policy development and policy enforcement decisions.

With these principles in mind, Google has long invested in ranking systems and has teams around the world working to connect people with high-quality content; in developing and enforcing rules that prohibit harmful behaviours and content on Google services; and in innovative ways to provide context to users when they might need it most. 

How companies like Google address information quality concerns has an impact on society and on the trust users place in our services. We are cognisant that these are complex issues, affecting all of society, which no single actor is in a position to fully tackle on their own. That is why we have welcomed the multi-stakeholder approach put forward by the EU Code of Conduct on Disinformation. 

Alongside our participation in the EU Code of Conduct on Disinformation, we continue to work closely with regulators to ensure that our services appropriately comply with the EU Digital Services Act (EU DSA), in full respect of EU fundamental rights such as freedom of expression.

The work of supporting a healthy information ecosystem is never finished and we remain committed to it. This is in our interest and the interest of our users.

This report includes metrics and narrative detail for Google Search, YouTube, and Google Advertising users in the European Union (EU), and covers the period from 1 January 2025 to 30 June 2025.

Updates to highlight in this report include (but are not limited to): 

  • 2025 Elections across EU Member States: In H1 2025 (1 January 2025 to 30 June 2025), voters cast their ballots in Germany, Portugal, Romania, and Poland. Google supported these democratic processes by surfacing high-quality information to voters, safeguarding its platforms from abuse, and equipping campaigns with best-in-class security tools and training. In addition, Google put in place a number of policies and other measures that helped people navigate political content that was AI-generated, including ad disclosures, content labels on YouTube, and digital watermarking tools. 

  • Advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI): In H1 2025, we announced new AI safeguards to help protect against misuse. We introduced SynthID Detector, a verification portal to identify AI-generated content made with Google AI. The portal, still in the early stages of tester mode, provides detection capabilities across different modalities in one place, and provides essential transparency in the rapidly evolving landscape of generative media.
    • When we launched SynthID — a state-of-the-art tool that embeds imperceptible watermarks and enables the identification of AI-generated content — our aim was to provide a suite of novel technical solutions to help minimise misinformation and misattribution.
    • SynthID not only preserves the content’s quality, it acts as a robust watermark that remains detectable even when the content is shared or undergoes a range of transformations. While originally focused on AI-generated imagery only, we’ve since expanded SynthID to Include AI-generated text, audio and video content, including content generated by our Gemini, Imagen, Lyria and Veo models. Over 10 billion pieces of content have already been watermarked with SynthID.
    • How SynthID Detector works: When you upload an image, audio track, video or piece of text created using Google's AI tools, the portal will scan the media for a SynthID watermark. If a watermark is detected, the portal will highlight specific portions of the content most likely to be watermarked. For audio, the portal pinpoints specific segments where a SynthID watermark is detected, and for images, it indicates areas where a watermark is most likely.

  • In addition to our continued work and investment in new tools, we are also committed to working with the greater ecosystem to help others benefit from and improve on the advances we are making. As such, we have open-sourced SynthID text watermarking through our updated Responsible Generative AI Toolkit. Underpinning our advancements in AI, as a member of the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA), we collaborate with Adobe, Microsoft, OpenAI, Meta, startups, and many others to build and implement the newest version (2.1) of the coalition’s technical standard, Content Credentials. This version is more secure against a wider range of tampering attacks due to stricter technical requirements for validating the history of the content’s provenance.

Google has been working on AI for over a decade to solve society’s biggest challenges and also power Google services people use every day. The progress in large-scale AI models (including generative AI) has sparked additional discussion about the social impacts of AI and raised concerns on topics such as disinformation. Google is committed to developing technology responsibly and first published AI Principles in 2018 to guide our work. Google’s robust internal governance focuses on responsibility throughout the AI development lifecycle, covering model development, application deployment, and post-launch monitoring. While we recently updated our Principles to adapt to shifts in technology, the global conversation, and the AI ecosystem, our deep commitment to responsible AI development remains unchanged. 

Through our philanthropic arm Google.org we have supported organisations that are using AI to tackle important societal issues. Google Search has published guidance on AI-generated content, outlining its approach to maintaining a high standard of information quality and the overall helpfulness of content on Search. To help enhance information quality across its services, Google continuously works to integrate new innovations in watermarking, metadata, and other techniques into its latest generative models. Google has also joined other leading AI companies to jointly commit to advancing responsible practices in the development of artificial intelligence which will support efforts by the G7, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and national governments. Going forward we will continue to report and expand upon Google developed AI tools and are committed to advance bold and responsible AI, to maximise AI’s benefits and minimise its risks.

Lastly, the contents of this report should be read with the following context in mind: 

  • This report discusses the key approaches across the following Google services when it comes to addressing disinformation: Google Search, YouTube, and Google Advertising. 
  • For chapters of the Code that involve the same actions across all three services (e.g. participation in the Permanent Task-force or in development of the Transparency Centre), we respond as 'Google, on behalf of related services'.
  • This report follows the structure and template laid out by the Code’s Permanent Task-force, organised around Commitments and Chapters of the Code.
  • Unless otherwise specified, metrics provided cover activities and actions during the period from 1 January 2025 to 30 June 2025.
  • The data provided in this report is subject to a range of factors, including product changes and user settings, and so is expected to fluctuate over the time of the reporting period. As Google continues to evolve its approach, in part to better address user and regulatory needs, the data reported here could vary substantially over time. 
  • We are continuously working to improve the safety and reliability of our services. We are not always in a position to pre-announce specific launch dates, details or timelines for upcoming improvements, and therefore may reply 'no' when asked whether we can disclose future plans for Code implementation measures in the coming reporting period. This 'no' should be understood against the background context that we are constantly working to improve safety and reliability and may in fact launch relevant changes without the ability to pre-announce. 
  • This report is filed concurrently with two ‘crisis reports’ about our response to the Israel-Gaza conflict and to the war in Ukraine. Additionally, an annex on Google’s response toward the recent elections in Romania, Portugal, Poland and Germany is included in this report.
  • The term ‘disinformation’ in this report refers to the definition included in the EU Code of Conduct on Disinformation.

Google looks forward to continuing to work together with other stakeholders in the EU to address challenges related to disinformation.

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Commitment 22
Relevant Signatories commit to provide users with tools to help them make more informed decisions when they encounter online information that may be false or misleading, and to facilitate user access to tools and information to assess the trustworthiness of information sources, such as indicators of trustworthiness for informed online navigation, particularly relating to societal issues or debates of general interest.
We signed up to the following measures of this commitment
Measure 22.7
In line with this commitment, did you deploy new implementation measures (e.g. changes to your terms of service, new tools, new policies, etc)?
No
If yes, list these implementation measures here
But, see QRE 22.7.1
Do you plan to put further implementation measures in place in the next 6 months to substantially improve the maturity of the implementation of this commitment?
No
If yes, which further implementation measures do you plan to put in place in the next 6 months?
N/A
Measure 22.7
Relevant Signatories will design and apply products and features (e.g. information panels, banners, pop-ups, maps and prompts, trustworthiness indicators) that lead users to authoritative sources on topics of particular public and societal interest or in crisis situations.
QRE 22.7.1
Relevant Signatories will outline the products and features they deploy across their services and will specify whether those are available across Member States.
Note: The below QRE response has been reproduced (in some instances truncated in order to meet the suggested character limit) from the previous report as there is no new information to share now.

YouTube highlights information from high-quality, third-party sources using information panels. As users navigate YouTube, they might see a variety of different information panels. These panels provide additional context, with each designed to help users make their own decisions about the content they find. 

These information panels will show regardless of what opinions or perspectives are expressed in a video. If users want to learn more, most panels also link to the third-party partner’s website.

Information panels on YouTube include, but are not limited to:
  • Panels on topics prone to misinformation: Topics that are prone to misinformation, such as the moon landing, may display an information panel at the top of search results or under a video. These information panels show basic background information, sourced from independent, third-party partners, to give more context on a topic. The panels also link to the third-party partner’s website. YouTube continues to assess and update the topics prone to misinformation that receive additional context from information panels. More details found here.
  • Election information panels: The election-related features are only available in select countries/regions during election cycles. Users may see candidate information panels, voting information panels, election integrity information panels, or election results information panels. More details found here.
  • Health-related information panels: Health-related topics, such as cancer treatment misinformation, may have a health information panel in your search results. These panels show info like symptoms, prevention and treatment options. More details found here.
  • Crisis resource panels: These panels let users connect with live support, 24/7 from recognised service partners. The panels may surface on the Watch page, when a user watches videos on topics related to suicide or self-harm, or in search results, when a user searches for topics related to certain health crises or emotional distress. More details found here.

Additional data points and EEA Member State coverage is provided in SLI 22.7.1.
SLI 22.7.1
Relevant Signatories will report on the reach and/or user interactions with the products or features, at the Member State level, via the metrics of impressions and interactions (clicks, click-through rates (as relevant to the tools and services in question) and shares (as relevant to the tools and services in question).
(1) Impressions of information panels (excluding fact-check panels, crisis resource panel, non-COVID medical panels) in H1 2025 (1 January 2025 to 30 June 2025), broken down by EEA Member State.

(2) Impressions on labels indicating altered or synthetic content.

Note: Due to a technical issue, some info panel impressions were undercounted. YouTube relies on a number of systems to calculate this metric and make the best effort to be as accurate as possible. Since the last report, YouTube has moved to reporting the metric via sampling, which derives the metric from a subset of the data by using random sampling for a better estimate of the number of impressions.
Country Impressions of information panels Impressions on labels indicating altered or synthetic content
Austria 36,950,757 35,908,138
Belgium 167,407,873 32,192,311
Bulgaria 49,748,085 22,197,544
Croatia 54,222,976 13,074,600
Cyprus 4,183,263 6,346,362
Czech Republic 157,675,234 43,550,449
Denmark 22,016,705 31,720,890
Estonia 16,418,581 5,646,988
Finland 15,279,046 16,681,096
France 1,000,634,704 212,319,334
Germany 2,552,766,596 413,944,130
Greece 25,349,565 36,600,994
Hungary 51,006,178 17,389,712
Ireland 72,559,534 27,200,214
Italy 758,249,496 255,118,514
Latvia 50,972,400 11,553,365
Lithuania 47,908,078 12,661,456
Luxembourg 2,630,439 2,743,446
Malta 2,356,838 2,594,124
Netherlands 458,307,918 84,857,904
Poland 454,115,580 159,350,791
Portugal 28,842,733 45,132,552
Romania 89,583,459 46,238,625
Slovakia 27,063,094 11,456,529
Slovenia 16,569,288 6,249,370
Spain 451,036,417 277,140,219
Sweden 121,980,070 41,023,290
Iceland 1,058,138 1,515,108
Liechtenstein 210,543 217,258
Norway 21,105,606 20,788,623
Total EU 6,735,834,907 1,870,892,947
Total EEA 6,758,209,194 1,893,413,936