Google is directing people towards misinformation and conspiracy theories by placing YouTube videos prominently in its search results, an investigation by Sky News has found.

Sky News found a number of search terms where extreme content and conspiracy theories featured highly in Google's results – including several topics of public concern. They appeared in the box marked "Videos", which Google places on the first page of certain searches, usually among the top results.

For instance, a search for the phrase "5G birds" – a search term relating to a conspiracy theory that upgraded mobile networks will kill birds – showed an article debunking the theory by fact-checking organisation Snopes as the first line.

Immediately underneath, the Videos box presented three YouTube videos repeating the claim. The first video, which came with a thumbnail picture, was "5G is killing birds What is it doing to us," a video from Life Energy Solutions, a New Zealand-based YouTube channel with 3,096 subscribers.

After Sky News alerted Google, which owns YouTube, to the search results, the Video box no longer appeared for this search term or other related terms.

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Image: Google and YouTube say deliberate misinformation online is a 'major concern'

Other search terms showed similar results. A search for "Maddy McCann", made while that term was trending in mid-March after the release of a Netflix documentary about the missing child, produced a Videos box in which the second item was "Five Creepy Facts About The Madeleine McCann Case," a video by a YouTube channel called Fully Sourced.

The video falsely claims that Kate McCann, Madeleine's mother, is a nymphomaniac, and links Madeleine's disappearance to John Podesta, Hillary Clinton's former campaign manager, and his brother Tony, a well-known conspiracy theory which has repeatedly been debunked. The video, which had 174,279 views in March, has now been watched over five million times.

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As well as giving relatively small channels unusual prominence, Google's Videos box featured videos from popular YouTube channels, without apparent regard for balance. In a search for the phrase "yellow vests", the Videos box was the fourth result, after the Wikipedia page and the "Top Stories" box. It showed two videos from the same publisher: RT, the Russian-government backed television network formerly known as Russia Today.

Clicking on the arrow to the right of the box revealed three further videos, one from RT and two from Ruptly, a video news agency owned by RT.

A search for "Muslim immigration Britain" on 25 April showed four videos
Image: Three out of four videos contained extremist views after a search using the words 'Muslim immigration Britain'

A spokesperson for Google and YouTube told Sky News that deliberate misinformation online was "a major concern", which it had been battling by cutting off some sites' revenue and prioritising authoritative sources, especially on sensitive topics. Searches around controversial topics such as vaccines or chemtrails produced no Video boxes on Google.

Sky News showed its findings to Will Moy, director of independent fact-checking charity Full Fact. "I'm concerned that when we look for information we ought to get the stuff that actually helps us make up our minds," he said.

"It's great that YouTube provides a platform for anyone to say what they want. It's not so great that they then amplify that to everyone who is casually searching. That seems to be a risk that they haven't fully understood."

Around two-thirds of the traffic to Full Fact's website comes from Google, highlighting the crucial role the search engine plays in directing people to information. "It is rightly often called the homepage of the internet," said Mr Moy.

There are calls for Google to address the YouTube search engine algorithm
Image: The YouTube search engine algorithm has been 'pushing people down rabbit holes', it is claimed

Until recently, many more searches showed contentious or divisive results in the Videos box. A search for "Tommy Robinson" on 19 March, the day after the far right activist's contempt of court case was delayed, produced a box with two videos from Mr Robinson's YouTube account, and a third video from a Robinson-supporting channel called ACTIVE PATRIOT UK. The Videos box was the third item on the results page, after Mr Robinson's Wikipedia page and another box containing news articles from publishers.

In another search for "Tommy Robinson", this time on 31 May, the Videos box again ranked highly. It showed videos from the Guardian and Sky News, alongside a video from far right channel Rebel Media. Clicking to bring up further videos revealed two more Robinson-supporting videos, including one from a channel which refers to Islam as a "poison".

A search for "Muslim immigration Britain" on 25 April showed four videos, three of which repeated far-right tropes (the fourth was from Channel 4). One was from far-right YouTuber You Kipper.

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