SAN BRUNO, CALIFORNIA / Content Syndication Services / — YouTube Premium has added Auto speed and On-the-go mode for podcasts, but the rollout arrives against a long record of user complaints over ads, subscription prompts and mobile features held behind paid access. The new tools give Android subscribers more playback controls, while free users remain on a version of YouTube shaped by pre-roll ads, mid-roll ads, back-to-back ad pods and repeated Premium upsell prompts.

The update adds limited convenience rather than a major change to the core service. Auto speed adjusts playback speed during spoken videos, but it is currently listed for English-language content on Android and does not apply to Shorts, premieres, live streams, music, movies or shows. On-the-go mode adds larger listening controls for motion and multitasking, yet it remains another paid feature inside the YouTube Premium package.
The contrast is sharper because the original YouTube experience did not begin with in-video advertising. YouTube launched in 2005, and in-video ad formats were introduced later, with overlay advertising appearing in 2007. Today, ad-free viewing is marketed as one of the main reasons to pay for Premium, turning the absence of interruptions into a subscription benefit rather than the baseline viewing experience many early users remember.
Free access carries more friction
Google’s own advertising documentation allows non-skippable video ads, including standard non-skippable ads and 30-second non-skippable ads on connected TV. YouTube also supports two back-to-back video ads on long-form videos, a format the company calls ad pods. For users who open the app expecting a quick video, those formats have become a central source of frustration, especially when the same service offers Premium as the direct route away from ad interruptions.
Public complaints have also focused on features that feel basic on mobile devices. Background playback is officially a YouTube Premium benefit on mobile, and Google has confirmed that non Premium users can no longer rely on mobile browser workarounds that previously allowed YouTube audio to continue while a phone screen was locked. Offline downloads and broader background access are also sold through Premium and Premium Lite plans rather than treated as standard mobile functions.
Premium still depends on restrictions
YouTube has also intensified enforcement against ad blockers. The platform has told users with ad blockers to allow ads or try YouTube Premium, and it has extended action to third-party apps that block ads. That enforcement has left critics describing Premium less as a standout upgrade and more as the paid exit from a degraded free experience built around ad exposure, blocked workarounds and recurring subscription prompts.
The podcast update does not remove that criticism. YouTube said podcasts on the platform have more than 1 billion monthly active users and that Premium users watched more than 800 million hours of podcasts in April 2026. Those figures show the scale of the audience, but the new tools are still narrow subscriber additions. For many users, the larger issue remains unchanged: YouTube Premium sells relief from ads and restores mobile conveniences that many viewers believe should not require a monthly payment.
