Almost all YouTube videos offer closed captions that users can easily enable on desktop and mobile. By default, closed captions are only in the primary language of the video, but users can also use subtitles if the video is in a foreign language. Viewers can enable closed captions on a per-video basis or for all videos. They can be added by the creator or auto-generated by Google's speech recognition system.
Closed captions on YouTube not only help viewers understand the content of the video when they are struggling to pick up the accent but can also help people who are hard-of-hearing. However, since captions and translations are automatically generated by YouTube using machine learning algorithms, the quality of the captions could vary due to mispronunciations, accents, dialects or background noise.
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By default, YouTube does not display closed captions for most videos. To enable closed captions, go to the target video and click on the 'CC' icon at the bottom. This will enable closed captions for that video. To disable it, simply click on the same icon once again. As explained by Google, the process is pretty much identical on the YouTube app, although the 'CC' icon will be displayed at the top of the video window in this case. Again, just like on the website, closed captions will be off by default, but users can tap on the 'CC' icon once to enable it or tap on it for a second time to disable it. Viewers can also enable closed captions in the middle of video playback. To do that, just hover over the video with the mouse on the desktop or tap on the video on mobile to see the available options.
The method described above will only enable closed
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