Google figured out early on that video would be a great addition to its search business, so in 2005 it launched Google Video. Focused on making deals with the entertainment industry for second-rate content, and overly cautious on what users could upload, it flopped. Meanwhile, a tiny startup run by a handful of employees working above a San Mateo, California, pizzeria was exploding, simply by letting anyone upload their goofy videos and not worrying too much about who held copyrights to the clips. In 2006, Google snapped up that year-old company, figuring it would sort out the IP stuff later. (It did.) Though the $1.65 billion purchase price for YouTube was about a billion dollars more than its valuation, it was one of the greatest bargains ever. YouTube is now arguably the most successful video property in the world. It’s an industry leader in music and podcasting, and more than half of its viewing time is now on living room screens. It has paid out over $100 billion to creators since 2021. One estimate from MoffettNathanson analysts cited by Variety is that if it were a separate company, it might be worth $550 billion.
- The AI Leap: A New Era for YouTube
- A Conversation with CEO Neal Mohan
- Democratizing Creation with Google’s AI
- Authenticity vs. ‘AI Slop’: The Core Challenge
- The Future is AI: YouTube’s Road Ahead
The AI Leap: A New Era for YouTube
Now the service is taking what might be its biggest leap yet, embracing a new paradigm that could change its essence. I’m talking, of course, about AI. Since YouTube is still a wholly owned subsidiary of AI-obsessed Google, it’s not surprising that its anniversary product announcements this week touted AI features that will let creators use AI to enhance or produce videos. After all, Google Deepmind’s Veo technology was YouTube’s for the taking. Ready or not, the video camera ultimately will be replaced by the prompt. This means a rethinking of YouTube’s superpower: authenticity.
A Conversation with CEO Neal Mohan
I had that shift in mind when I recently interviewed YouTube CEO Neal Mohan at his office at YouTube’s San Bruno, California, headquarters. Mohan took over as CEO in 2023 when his boss, Susan Wojcicki, left her post due to a fatal cancer. But first we chat a bit about the company’s history. Mohan reminds me that his own connection with the service began even before he joined Google in 2008, after his ad company DoubleClick merged with the search giant. He was struck by how the YouTube founders were first with a revelation that, he says, remains the core of the service. “It was not just that people were interested in sharing short clips about themselves and that it was done without a gatekeeper,” he says, “but that people were interested in watching them. That was the big bang inflection point. Our mission is to give everyone a voice and show them the world.”
Critics of Google’s power often argue that not only the public but also YouTube itself might benefit from a split from the mother company. Just think what the world’s biggest video company could do if it were truly independent. Mohan, a self-admitted Google loyalist, disagrees. “I don’t believe YouTube would be where it is if it weren’t part of Google,” he says. He says that being part of a giant company allowed YouTube to make long-term bets on things like streaming and podcasting. When I ask whether YouTube might be even more innovative on its own, he reminds me that YouTube has been sufficiently innovative to challenge legacy media in things like live sports while fending off challenges from competitors focusing on the creator economy.
YouTube has an advantage in breadth that TikTok and Reels can’t dream of … “everything from a 15-second short to a 15-minute traditional long-form YouTube video to a 15-hour livestream and everything in between,” Mohan crows.
Democratizing Creation with Google’s AI
It’s currently pressing another advantage: Google’s AI technology. The announcements this week range from fun features like putting you or your friends’ bodies into videos showing astonishing acrobatic feats or allowing podcasters to make instant television shows from their audio conversations by having AI create visuals that resonate with the content of the chatter. Mohan says that, in a sense, AI is just the latest enhancement of the service. “When YouTube was born 20 years ago it was about using technology for more people to have their voice heard,” he says. “With AI, it’s the same core principle – how do we use technology to democratize creation?”
Authenticity vs. ‘AI Slop’: The Core Challenge
Democratizing is great. But when does it become automizing? One new experimental feature brings Google’s Veo instant video creation to the YouTube platform. Simply by saying, “Show me 100 Indonesian dancers on the moon,” you have a wild video. But it’s not really clear who’s doing the creative heavy lifting. When I first saw these features demo’d by Dina Berrada, YouTube’s product director of AI generation, it immediately struck me that YouTube might be overwhelmed by AI slop. Berrada assured me it wouldn’t, citing YouTube’s experience with short-form creator content, where cream always rises to the top. (Decide for yourself if this is true.) “The content everyone is watching is authentic content and human content,” she says. AI-prompted videos will be labeled, she says, though there’s no option for viewers to filter out anything that’s created by AI.
Mohan has a similar view. He compares the use of AI to digital music technology. “You can program a synthesizer to produce this type of music, these types of beats.” he says. “The genius is going to lie whether you did it in a way that was profoundly original or creative.” He urges skeptics not to make a priori judgments about AI video. “Just because the content is 75 percent AI generated doesn’t make it any better or worse than a video that’s 5 percent AI generated,” he says. “What’s important is that it was done by a human being.”
The Future is AI: YouTube’s Road Ahead
I think we will be arguing for a long time whether or not some of the upcoming AI creations on YouTube or elsewhere are indeed made by human beings. I didn’t dare to ask Mohan to predict where we’ll be on this issue 20 years from now, instead asking him just to speculate what’s ahead in a three- to five-year time frame. His answer: more AI. “I do believe that those creation tools that you saw are going to have an impact on the type of videos and the nature of videos that are created. Our job at YouTube is to be at the cutting edge.” Let’s hope humans still make the final cut.
YouTube’s journey from a small startup to a media titan is a testament to its user-centric model. Now, by integrating powerful AI tools like Google’s Veo, the platform is poised for another transformation. While this AI revolution promises to democratize video creation further, it also raises critical questions about authenticity and the future role of human creativity. How YouTube navigates this challenge will ultimately define its next chapter in the digital age.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Google acquire YouTube?
Google’s own platform, Google Video, had failed to gain traction, while YouTube was rapidly growing by allowing anyone to upload content freely. Recognizing its success, Google purchased the year-old startup in 2006 for $1.65 billion, a deal now considered one of the best bargains in tech history.
How is YouTube incorporating AI into its platform?
YouTube is introducing new AI-powered features that allow creators to produce or enhance videos using simple prompts, leveraging Google’s Veo 3 technology. These tools can generate visuals for podcasts or create entire video clips from text, aiming to democratize the creation process for everyone.
Does YouTube’s CEO believe the company would be better off independent from Google?
No, CEO Neal Mohan is a firm believer that YouTube’s success is directly linked to being part of Google. He argues that the parent company’s resources allowed YouTube to make crucial long-term investments in areas like streaming and podcasting.
How does YouTube plan to handle the potential for low-quality, AI-generated content?
YouTube’s leadership believes that authentic and creative human-led content will naturally rise to the top, just as it has with other video formats. While AI-generated videos will be labeled, the company’s stance is that the quality depends on the human’s originality, not the percentage of AI used in its creation.







