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ORIGINAL CONTENT:
What it is
YouTube is a video-sharing and streaming platform founded in 2005 and acquired by Google (now Alphabet Inc.) in 2006. As of 2026, YouTube reports more than 2 billion logged-in users per month, making it the world’s second-most-visited website after Google Search, and the dominant platform for long-form and short-form video content globally.[1] The platform is organized around channels — content libraries created by individual creators, brands, media companies, and institutions. Viewers subscribe to channels to receive notifications and feed access, and can interact with content through likes, comments, shares, saves, and — via the Community Posts feature — direct poll participation.
YouTube’s primary contest surface is Community Posts, a feature available to channels with at least 500 subscribers that allows creators to publish text, image, and poll updates directly to their subscribers’ Home and Subscriptions feeds without a video attachment.
In the context of online contests
YouTube contests take several distinct forms depending on whether they are native to YouTube or cross-platform:
- Community Poll contests: A creator publishes a Community Post containing a native YouTube poll. Subscribers vote for their preferred option. The poll result drives a content decision — which video topic to cover next, which collaborator to feature, which product to design — or determines a winner in a fan-choice competition.
- Like-based video contests: Brands or creators upload multiple competing videos and ask audiences to indicate their preference by liking the preferred entry. The video with more likes wins. This format is limited by YouTube’s public like-count display, which was made private for dislikes in 2021 (only the uploader sees the dislike count).
- Comment-based contests: Creators ask viewers to comment their vote (e.g., “Comment A or B below”) on a video or Community Post. Comment counts or specific comment keywords are tallied manually or via moderation tools.
- Cross-platform contests where YouTube is a source: Many large fan-choice awards — music video of the year, best creator, most popular category — aggregate votes across multiple platforms including YouTube views, likes, and comment counts alongside votes from dedicated contest websites.
- YouTube Shorts polls: Short-form Shorts can be accompanied by Community Posts containing polls, enabling creator-audience voting tied to short video content.
YouTube’s subscriber base size and the depth of creator-audience relationships make it a particularly high-trust contest environment. Fans who vote on a creator’s Community Post typically have a long-standing subscription relationship with that channel — a different engagement context than a casual social media poll.
Voting mechanics
YouTube’s Community Post poll feature has specific mechanical properties that shape how contests operate:[2]
- Up to 5 options per poll: Community Post polls support between 2 and 5 answer choices. Each choice can be up to 50 characters.
- No enforced expiry: Unlike Instagram Stories, YouTube Community Post polls do not expire automatically. The creator can leave a poll open indefinitely or delete the post to close it.
- One vote per account: Each Google account can cast one vote per poll. Changing the vote is not possible once submitted — the selection is final.
- Real-time result display: Vote percentages update live as votes are cast. All viewers — whether they have voted or not — can see the current vote distribution. Hovering over a result shows the percentage for each option.
- Subscriber-gated visibility: Community Posts are primarily distributed to a channel’s own subscribers via the Home and Subscriptions feeds. Non-subscribers can view a channel’s Community tab directly, but organic feed distribution is limited to existing subscribers.
- No anonymous results for creators: Unlike X polls, YouTube does not provide the channel creator with a voter list. The creator sees only aggregate percentages, the same data visible to all viewers.
- Like and dislike counts on videos: Video like counts remain public. Dislike counts were made private to non-uploaders in November 2021, per YouTube’s platform policy change.[3]
Anti-fraud signals
YouTube’s content integrity systems are primarily oriented toward video spam, inauthentic view inflation, and comment fraud rather than poll manipulation specifically. However, Google’s broader account quality infrastructure provides several relevant signals:
- Google Account age and verification: YouTube accounts are Google accounts. Accounts created recently with no verified phone number, no YouTube watch history, and no prior channel interactions carry low authenticity scores. Google’s account quality signals propagate to YouTube engagement actions.
- IP address reputation: Google’s infrastructure applies IP reputation scoring to all authenticated actions, including Community Post poll votes. Votes from residential and mobile IP ranges are treated differently from datacenter or known proxy ranges.
- Account activity history on YouTube: An account with no subscription history, no liked videos, no comments, and no watch history that votes on a creator’s Community Poll is a weaker signal than an account with years of organic engagement on the platform.
- CAPTCHA and bot-challenge systems: Google applies invisible reCAPTCHA and behavioral challenge systems to authenticated interactions. Actions that fail behavioral fingerprinting tests — no scroll behavior, instant interaction, missing session metadata — can be challenged or flagged.
- Velocity and clustering: A burst of votes within a short window from a geographically clustered set of IP addresses or device fingerprints can trigger YouTube’s automated anomaly detection, particularly for larger channels with baseline engagement metrics that make deviations more visible.
YouTube does not currently publish specific policies for Community Post poll integrity, and the platform does not routinely audit or invalidate Community Post votes the way Instagram runs account-quality sweeps on story interactions.
For marketers
YouTube is a high-trust, high-depth engagement platform where community members have typically followed a creator for months or years. This creates a distinct dynamics from Twitter or Facebook contests:
- Subscriber depth matters more than raw reach: A creator with 200,000 highly engaged subscribers will typically drive more authentic Community Post poll responses than a Page with 2 million low-engagement followers on Facebook. Poll vote context on YouTube is a stronger social signal per vote.
- Community Posts favor established channels: The organic distribution of Community Posts is limited to a channel’s existing subscriber base. Channels below 500 subscribers cannot create Community Posts at all, and new channels face a slower organic poll response ramp than their subscriber count might suggest.
- YouTube contests often bridge to other platforms: Major fan-choice contests in music, gaming, and entertainment use YouTube as one vote input alongside dedicated contest websites and other social platforms. YouTube vote counts — from likes, comment tallies, or aggregated Community Poll results — are frequently cited as evidence of a candidate’s popularity in multi-platform competitions.
- Video view counts as proxy votes: For contests where content quality determines the outcome, YouTube view counts (which remain fully public) are sometimes used as a proxy vote metric. This is common in user-generated content competitions where the creator with the most-viewed entry wins.
- Long contest windows are viable: Because YouTube Community Post polls do not expire and video engagement accumulates over weeks, YouTube-based contests can run for longer durations than Story-based Instagram contests, making them suitable for campaigns with 7-to-30-day windows.
Sources
- YouTube Press — Platform Overview and Stats: https://www.youtube.com/intl/en_GB/about/press/
- YouTube Help — Create a Community Post: https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/9409661
- YouTube Help — Dislike Count Update and Like Counts: https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/7124878