YouTube apologized on Monday and vowed to fix a filtering feature that several prominent LGBT creators said censored their videos.

The site's "restricted mode" lets users filter out "potentially objectionable content," the platform says, but some vloggers said it's actually hiding pro-LGBT material by marking it as inappropriate.

Videos ranging from a documentary about trans youth, to makeup lessons and an LGBT couple reciting wedding vows were no longer visible after the filter was enacted.

Just looked at my videos with the "restricted mode" on. Seeing a bit of a theme here... LGBT+ content not safe for… https://t.co/Ft7Eod6mCr

Pressured by the backlash, YouTube apologized on Monday and conceded that the filtering mechanism had mistakenly removed content, misunderstanding context and nuances.

"The bottom line is that this feature isn’t working the way it should. We’re sorry and we’re going to fix it," the company wrote in a blog post.