I don't recommend it to others because it's a fucking minefield, but once you know how to identify someone trustworthy, youtube becomes a top-tier source of sources.
Unfortunately it's mostly garbage, and you have to avoid a lot of the entertainment stuff or the algorithm will pick up on that and start giving you more "entertaining", unreliable youtubers and fewer good ones.
Now, I get NOTHING recommended to me AT ALL other than the safest stuff from my subscriptions. I prefer it...but it's hard because it doesn't even track my watch history anymore unless I specifically add a video that I like to a playlist. It's easy to see how impressionable, smart young men can be propagandized into becoming anti-labor, card-carrying members of Y'all Qaeda, having this billionaire worship, utter horseshit shoved down their throats all day 🤢🤢🤢🤢🤢🤢🤢🤢.
IMO, it's going to cause the downfall of society, having these dangerous sociopaths enriched and amplified by social media algorithms.
edit: this comment motivated me to start a new community for Jordan Peterson debunking. 😅😅😅
Regardless of its danger, navigating it is the job of our generation, no less important than the tasks of those that came before.
In my experience, it's about the side content. The quickest way to get to Jordan Peterson is to google a lot of gaming videos. This is just basic demographics and marketing, ever since gamergate. Gamers are often teen boys. Teen boys frequently like bullying people. Gamergate was a bullying campaign.
All there really is to it. Since it worked and increased profits, they kept or reinforced it.
Breaking their market lock is the key step forward imo.
The algorithm actually targeted me because I am into engineering (Mark Rober videos, smarter everyday, etc)...and youtube LOVES to talk about how great of an engineer mElon is despite his tendency to not even follow basic engineering principles like redundancy.
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn't work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !jordanpeterson@lemmy.world