I hate YouTube Shorts, and I hate that Google keeps trying to force it on me. I usually click the
x
to hide that crap, but Google made it so you can only hide it for 30 days at a time. (Jerks)But today, they got me. I clicked on a news related short that caught my attention. I was immediately filled with shame. But what bothered me even more than violating my integrity was that there was no date visible anywhere on the video
And, naturally, the video content was some controversy about the culture wars. But without an easily visible timestamp on the video, I couldn't place the controversy within its proper context. I was free to imagine in my own mind what events the controversy was really about.
Eventually, I did find the date. I had to click on the 3-dots "hamburger icon" and pull up the video details. But 99% of viewers are not gonna do that.
This made me think. I've noticed on a number of blogs and other websites that don't always make the creation date of the content visible. Personally, I think this is more than just bad design. I would go as far as to say it's unethical because it misleads and can make old content seem new, or vice versa. It makes it harder for the reader/viewer to sort out whether the content is still relevant and to understand the content within its proper context.
I'm not gonna go as far as to say there should be a law about this, but when I see web design that doesn't clearly show the date the content was created, I'm going to treat it with greater suspicion and use my voice to speak out against that website. Thankfully, Stacker.News is very transparent about when all content was created.
What do you think? Do you agree with me that it is unethical to hide the date that content was created? Or do you think it's fine and that there are good reasons for it?