{"source":{"name":"The Evidence Hub - on the regulation of digital services","url":"https:\/\/evidencehub.net","license":"Creative Common CC-BY 4.0 International"},"data":[{"data":[1084552571,20082262,326111],"name":"Values"}],"_data":[["Human Flags","Values"],["User","1084552571"],["Trusted Flagger","20082262"],["NGO","326111"]],"labels":{"name":"Human Flags","values":["User","Trusted Flagger","NGO"]},"metadata":{"link":"https:\/\/transparencyreport.google.com\/youtube-policy\/flags?hl=en","type":"Problem","unit":"Per cent (%)","year":"2017-2022","title":"Human Flags of YouTube Videos by Type of Flagger","topic":"Illegal Content","method":"Self-reporting","source":"Google. Transparency Report: Flags - Illegal Content Online (www.google.com, 2022)","sub_topic":"Prevalence of illegal content","chart_number":"280","geographical":"Global"},"description":"The chart shows the distribution of human flags on YouTube for the period October 2017 - March 2022, by type of flagger. Human flags can come from a user or a member of YouTube\u2019s Trusted Flagger program,which include individuals, NGOs and government agencies. The chart shows that the majority of human flags come from users, followed by individual trusted flaggers. The share of flags from NGOs is insignificant compared to the other two type of flaggers."}