Several major companies stopped buying advertisements on YouTube after their ads appeared on videos where pedophiles littered the comment sections, The New York Times reported Wednesday.

The videos pedophiles targeted apparently did not violate the company’s rules, but the content became overrun with lewd remarks directed at the children, many of them young girls doing gymnastics or playing Twister, the report notes. Commenters sometimes posted suggestive comments asking whether the kids were wearing underwear.

“Any content, including comments, that endangers minors is abhorrent and we have clear policies prohibiting this on YouTube,” Chi Hea Cho, a spokeswoman for YouTube’s parent company, Google, told reporters. “There’s more to be done, and we continue to work to improve and catch abuse more quickly.” Epic Games, GNC and Nestlé’s, among others said they removed advertising on the platform after YouTube creator Matt Watson posted a video highlighting the issue and accused the company of “facilitating the sexual exploitation” of children. YouTube’s recommendation feature directs many potential pedophiles to similar videos, Watson noted in the video, which has received more than 1 million views as of Wednesday. “When we learned of this issue, we were, and still are, absolutely horrified and reached out to YouTube to rectify this immediately,” Senka Hadzimuratovic, a spokeswoman for the online grammar tool Grammarly, told reporters. “We have a strict policy against advertising alongside harmful or offensive content and would never knowingly associate ourselves with channels like this. It goes against everything our company stands for.” YouTube disabled comments on tens of millions of videos featuring kids and removed thousands of offensive comments on similar content, Cho said. The company also removed hundreds of YouTube channels for comments their users left on videos and reported the incidents to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. The incident comes less than a year after YouTube admitted that some of their moderators might have mistakenly removed thousands of accounts. (RELATED: YouTube Admits To Mistakenly Removing A Lot Of Conservative Accounts In Latest Purge) The company enlisted 10,000 employees in December 2018 specifically to oversee accounts and the content they produce. They were especially used during the aftermath of the mass school shooting in Parkland Florida. A number of highly erroneous conspiracy theories were peddled on the platform by a number of fringe accounts, and YouTube ultimately removed them. Follow Chris White on Facebook and Twitter

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