Difference between revisions of "YouTube/Censorship"

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(Kafka 2.0: How Youtube’s Political Censorship Is Exercised)
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'''YouTube Censorship''' has accelerated since the "[[Fake News]]" mem was launched in [[2016]].
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'''YouTube Censorship''' has accelerated since the "[[Fake News]]" meme was launched in [[2016]].
  
 
==Policy==
 
==Policy==

Revision as of 02:14, 27 January 2018

Concept.png YouTube/Censorship
(Censorship)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
YouTube Censorship.png
Interest of• AltCensored
• Project Veritas
• Reclaim The Net

YouTube Censorship has accelerated since the "Fake News" meme was launched in 2016.

Policy

After his channel was deleted, Sayed Hasan charged that "Youtube strives to hide its censorship behind a pseudo-legalistic procedure."[1]

2016

In 2016, YouTube announced that making "negative comments" about someone else and hurting their feelings might be considered sufficient grounds for the to censor content.[2]

2017

In 2017, YouTube was reportedly faster as censoring content than Facebook or Twitter, taking down 90% of all content flagged within 24 hours.[3]

"Worsening pattern of censorship of political speech"

Prompted by the removal of a video he had posted about the 2017 Las Vegas shooting, Mike Adams reported in December 2017 on "the worsening pattern of censorship of political speech by YouTube."[4]

2018

In 2018, of Sayed Hasan criticised YouTube after it removed his channel on December 2017. This has had 400 videos and over 6 million views, "subtitled in French and English speeches of Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, Secretary General of Hezbollah", explaining that it was a “violation of the rules concerning violent or graphic content on Youtube”. This contrasts with its acceptance of Donald Trump's threat to “completely destroy” North Korea "or the Israeli bragging about bombing Iran and toppling its regime, assassinating Hassan Nasrallah".[1]


 

An example

Page nameDescription
DemonetizationA deep state weapon?

 

YouTube/Censorship victims on Wikispooks

TitleDescription
Jair BolsonaroPresident of Brazil who publicly refused a COVID-19 jab and suggested that the virus may have been intentionally created and released.
Dave CullenIrish Youtuber and political dissident.
Patrick LancasterFormer US Navy sailor living in Donbass who covered the war since the beginning.
Matt OrfaleaAmerican video blogger
Rand Paul

 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthorDate
Integrity Initiative/Leak/3“Find ways to remove e.g. RT/Ruptly video and infographic content from corporate media e.g. newspaper websites, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, etc. Such content is quite professionally done, entertaining and cheap (or even free) for cash-strapped corporate media outlets. But for these reasons, this kind of content gets numerous ‘clicks’ and is therefore picked up by reputable outlets that help spread Russian disinformation.”Victor Madeira16 March 2018
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References