Google is testing AI-generated summaries in YouTube feeds, replacing video titles with auto-written synopses.
Some YouTube users are seeing video titles replaced by AI-generated summaries in the Android app. Reports on Reddit showed title-less video cards with collapsible summary boxes instead.
The details. Video thumbnails remain, but titles are missing in some cases.
AI summaries appear in expandable text boxes beneath each video.
Users must tap to expand summaries to understand the content.
The test appears limited to YouTube on Android.
What it looks like. Here’s a screenshot Reddit user GrimmOConnor shared:
Why we care. This further abstracts creator metadata and reduces control over how your YouTube content appears. Titles remain a critical ranking and click-through signal. Replacing them with AI summaries can impact keyword targeting, brand voice, and intent matching — and increase the risk of inaccuracies that hurt performance.
The context. Google is also testing AI-generated headline rewrites in Search, extending the same approach beyond Discover and now potentially into YouTube.
Google confirmed a “small” and “narrow” experiment replacing original page titles with AI-generated versions in Search results.
According to Google, the goal is to better match queries and improve engagement.
But examples showed Google shortening or rewording headlines, changing tone and meaning.
Reaction. Early feedback suggests a worse browsing experience. Expanding summaries slows discovery and adds friction to content selection, which runs counter to YouTube’s engagement goals.
What’s next. There’s no official confirmation from YouTube on a broader rollout. The missing titles may be a bug, but the AI summary feature aligns with Google’s broader push into generative AI.
First seen. We learned about this test from Android Authority.