Teenagers as young as 13 could view misogynistic Andrew Tate videos on YouTube, report finds

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"Report Reveals Accessibility of Misogynistic Andrew Tate Videos to Teenagers on YouTube"

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A recent report by the Center for Countering Digital Hate has revealed that teenagers as young as 13 can easily access misogynistic videos featuring Andrew Tate on YouTube. The researchers created accounts mimicking 13-year-old boys and discovered that 100 of the most-viewed misogynistic videos from Tate, who had his own YouTube account banned in 2022, were accessible in both the United States and the United Kingdom. This accessibility raises concerns regarding similar access in Australia, especially with ongoing discussions about implementing a social media ban for users under 16. The report analyzed nearly 1,900 videos of Tate on the platform, ultimately finding that the 100 most popular videos amassed around 54 million views. Some of these videos contained alarming content, with Tate making statements that promote unhealthy dynamics in relationships, which could negatively influence impressionable young viewers.

YouTube has responded to the report by stating it has removed hundreds of thousands of videos associated with Tate and has terminated many accounts attempting to evade the ban. However, the platform acknowledged that it had not received all videos from the Center for Countering Digital Hate for review, suggesting that not every piece of content featuring Tate would be removed. The chief executive of the Center, Imran Ahmed, criticized YouTube for its inadequate enforcement of community guidelines, highlighting a troubling trend of rising violence among teenagers, particularly against girls, which has been referred to as the 'Tate phenomenon.' Ahmed emphasized the importance of addressing the influence of figures like Tate on young audiences and echoed the sentiment that stronger actions may be necessary to ensure safer online environments for children. Previous studies have also shown that YouTube tends to recommend misogynistic content to young male users, exacerbating concerns about the platform's impact on youth behavior and attitudes towards women. The Australian government is contemplating whether to include YouTube in a proposed social media ban aimed at protecting underage users from harmful content, reflecting a growing awareness of the negative effects of social media on mental health and relationships.

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Teenagers as young as 13 could access 100 of the most-viewed videos featuring misogynistic content from Andrew Tate onYouTube, a new report has found, amid a push to have the video platform included in Australia’s under-16s social media ban.

Researchers from the US-based Center for Countering Digital Hate set up accounts purporting to be 13-year-old boys and found the videos from the rightwing influencer, whose own YouTube account wasbanned in 2022, were accessible to those accounts in the US and the UK, meaning they would also have likely been accessible in Australia.

Theirreportanalysed nearly 1,900 videos of Tate from YouTube between May 2024 and May 2025, and filtered them down to the 100 most-viewed videos containing misogyny, accounting for nearly 54m views on the site.

In one video, Tate says: “Nowadays it’s gotten so fucked up – you got the men and the women, the husband and wife, all together on the same table. The men are trying to have a conversation, some dude’s wife fucking pipes up.”

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In another video, Tate says: “Have a solid bottom bitch, if you have one girl who truly is out … and is on your side, and you can use her to control other girls, it’s so much easier.”

Some of the videos had ads running on them, meaning YouTube receives revenue for views of the videos.

YouTube said it had removed hundreds of thousands of Tate videos since the ban, and terminated thousands of accounts that had sought to circumvent the original decision and attempted to upload content from the banned creator.

A spokesperson said it had not received all videos from the centre to check for a breach of company policies.

“But as with all terminated users, not all content that features Andrew Tate will be removed. Only 11 videos from the CCDH report were shared with us to review – the majority have been removed for violating our terms of service, and we’ve terminated a number of the featured channels.”

Some of the videos cited in the report had since been removed for violating YouTube policies, or had their accounts deleted.

The chief executive of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, Imran Ahmed, said YouTube, like all platforms, is “incredibly poor at enforcing its own rules, even when we notify them about it.”

He said the head of the Metropolitan police in London had recently told him about the growth of teenager-on-teenager violence against girls.

“That is being dubbed the Tate phenomenon, because what we’re seeing is a significant increase. We’re seeing significant evidence around the world of young men moving to sort of extremist and in particular, far-right politics,” he said.

Ahmed said figures like Tate are grooming young people into extreme positions, and while he said the Center for Countering Digital Hate had not advocated for a social media ban, he “can understand why governments feel it’s necessary in the absence of platforms that are taking real steps to create safer platforms for children”.

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“Every time we test platforms on their claims to have implemented one or another policy or scheme to make platforms safer for kids, we find them to be either deeply flawed or actually completely absent in reality.”

Previous studies on the availability of misogynistic content on YouTube, have also found the platform recommends such content quickly to young male accounts.A studyin April this year found that on 10 blank profiles set up as young boys or men, YouTube would recommend manosphere content more than any other type, accounting for 61.5% of the content recommended.

A2022 Australian studyfound similar results.

Awar of words eruptedbetween the Alphabet-owned platform and the eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, last week when the online safety regulator recommended to the communications minister, Anika Wells, that YouTube not be excluded from the ban under rules currently in development ahead of the ban being in place in December.

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, on Monday did not directly answer a question on whether he would support including YouTube in the ban, but said there was “greater consciousness of the damage that social media can do on the mental health of young people” and more needed to be done to tackle the violence against women and children.

“We’ve got to also consider what is going on with young men and boys being exposed to graphic material which does not promote healthy relationships, can often promote a violent perception and misogynistic attitude towards women,” he said.

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Source: The Guardian