Tens of Thousands of YouTube Users Slam Omission of Dislike Button

The YouTube app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. (Reuters)
The YouTube app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. (Reuters)
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Tens of Thousands of YouTube Users Slam Omission of Dislike Button

The YouTube app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. (Reuters)
The YouTube app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. (Reuters)

Tens of thousands of YouTube users are criticizing its decision to hide how many times a video has been disliked, according to the German news agency.

The Google-owned platform announced, a few days ago, it will no longer show how many "dislike" ratings a video has received in an effort to create an "inclusive and respectful environment."

However, users will still be able to click on the dislike button for any video, YouTube said. It will no longer impact other users' discretion to watch a video, as the dislike counter will be visible only to the creators of the video.

Since the announcement on Wednesday, tens of thousands of users of the web's largest video platform are criticizing the move. "This isn't about protecting creators. This is about protecting corporations and media companies," one user commented on a YouTube video announcing the changes. The comment received 14,000 likes and an unknown number of dislikes.

YouTube's video announcing plans to hide dislike counts received 33,000 thumbs down (dislikes), four times more than the number of thumbs up (likes).

While YouTube's public comments section remains intact, removing a quick mean to see the public verdict on a video will make it more difficult to spot bad or disputed content, users have argued. Following the announcement, YouTube dismissed user complaints that the move amounts to censorship and protecting big brands and advertisers.



Alibaba Launches Open-Source AI Coding Model, Touted as Its Most Advanced to Date 

A man walks past the Alibaba logo displayed at its booth during the China International Supply Chain Expo in Beijing, China July 16, 2025. (Reuters)
A man walks past the Alibaba logo displayed at its booth during the China International Supply Chain Expo in Beijing, China July 16, 2025. (Reuters)
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Alibaba Launches Open-Source AI Coding Model, Touted as Its Most Advanced to Date 

A man walks past the Alibaba logo displayed at its booth during the China International Supply Chain Expo in Beijing, China July 16, 2025. (Reuters)
A man walks past the Alibaba logo displayed at its booth during the China International Supply Chain Expo in Beijing, China July 16, 2025. (Reuters)

Alibaba Group announced on Wednesday the launch of Qwen3-Coder, an open-source artificial intelligence model for software development that the Chinese e-commerce giant described as its most advanced coding tool to date.

The launch comes amid intensifying competition among Chinese technology companies in the global AI development race, with firms on both sides of the Pacific releasing increasingly sophisticated models. Qwen3-Coder is designed for software development tasks such as code generation and managing complex coding workflows, Alibaba said in a statement.

The company positioned the model as particularly strong in "agentic AI coding tasks" - automated processes where AI systems can work independently on programming challenges.

According to performance data released by Alibaba, Qwen3-Coder outperformed domestic competitors, including models from DeepSeek and Moonshot AI's K2 in key coding capabilities.

The company also claimed its model matched the performance of leading US models, including Anthropic's Claude and OpenAI's GPT-4 in certain areas.