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  by Ian Miles Cheong
 August 01, 
			2017
 from 
			DailyCaller Website
 
			  
			  
			  
			
 
 
  
 
 
				
					
						
							
								
								Google's 
								chairman is Eric Schmidt, also a member of the
								
								Trilateral Commission 
								and a died-in-the-wool Technocrat who is bent on 
								imposing his ideology on the entire world.
								   
								His 
								platform has become his sledge hammer. Expect 
								censorship to increase along with howls of 
								protest from users. 
								
								
								
								Source 
			  
			
 Popular 
			YouTubers React to Censorship of 'Controversial' Content
 
 YouTube has announced a new system to catch and flag what it calls,
 
				
				"controversial religious and supremacist" videos hosted on the 
			platform.  
			The platform plans to 
			hide these videos from wider audiences, and demonetize them to 
			prevent their creators from earning revenue from YouTube.
 The move was met with widespread skepticism from YouTube content 
			creators.
 
 To crack down on offensive content, the company is using a 
			combination of machine learning and volunteer "experts" to flag that 
			needs review. It also plans to implement "tougher standards" for 
			videos that are controversial but do not violate the site's terms of 
			service.
 
 YouTube says it isn't going to remove the borderline content 
			entirely, but will instead place these videos in a purgatory state 
			preventing them from being monetized or promoted.
 
			  
			To facilitate these 
			changes, YouTube will be artificially altering its search algorithms 
			to prevent offensive topics from discovery.
 We'll soon be applying tougher treatment to videos that aren't 
			illegal but have been flagged by users as potential violations of 
			our policies on hate speech and violent extremism. If we find that 
			these videos don't violate our policies but contain controversial 
			religious or supremacist content, they will be placed in a limited 
			state.
 
			  
			The videos will remain on 
			YouTube behind an interstitial, won't be recommended, won't be 
			monetized, and won't have key features including comments, suggested 
			videos, and likes.
 According to YouTube, the system, while largely automated, will mix 
			in human reviews in the form of its already established "Trusted 
			Flagger" volunteer program that works with over 15 institutions to 
			deal with extremist content, including the Anti-Defamation League 
			(ADL).
 
 
			The ADL recently
			
			released a list naming members of the "alt-right" and the "alt-lite," 
			the latter of which included controversial YouTube personalities 
			like, 
				
					
					
					Gavin 
					McInnes
					
					Mike 
					Cernovich
					
					Brittany 
					Pettibone 
			Curiously,
			
			the ADL is selective in what it 
			chooses to label as "extremism."    
			It does not 
			have violent far-left ideologies like Antifa and militant 
			leftist organizations like
			
			Redneck Revolt on its radar.   
			It's worth noting 
			that the "Trusted Flagger" system was later transformed into the 
			much maligned "YouTube 
			Heroes" program, which invited the public to help moderate 
			content.    
			It was heavily 
			criticized for giving social justice activists the power to 
			manipulate the platform. 
			  
			  
			
			
			 
			
			A picture illustration shows a YouTube logo 
			
			reflected in a person's eye June 18, 2014.  
			
			REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo 
			    
			Despite the 
			apparent focus on targeting extremism, YouTube's announcement 
			includes the company's efforts to artificially promote videos 
			through its "Creators 
			for Change" program, which in YouTube's own words pushes 
			creators who are, 
				
				"using their 
				voices to speak out against hate speech, xenophobia, and 
				extremism." 
			High-profile 
			feminists, including 
			
			Franchesca 
			Ramsey, are listed as ambassadors and fellows. 
			   
			Notably absent is
			Laci Green, whose strong 1.5 million subscriber count earns 
			her top billing as the site's most popular feminist. 
			   
			Green has
			
			come under fire from social justice advocates for opening 
			dialogue with anti-feminists. 
				
				"If a video 
				doesn't break YouTube's terms of services then they absolutely 
				SHOULD NOT be attempting to dampen the reach of the video any 
				further," said YouTuber Annand "Bunty 
				King" Virk, who raised his concerns with The Daily Caller.
				   
				"Who determines 
				what's passable and what isn't? At what point do we finally 
				realize that saying the right thing isn't always about saying 
				what people want to hear?"   
				"By these 
				standards, if YouTube existed previous to the Emancipation Act, 
				they'd be censoring videos criticizing slave owners, since being 
				anti-slavery wasn't popular… at all," he added. 
				   
				"The popular 
				opinion isn't always the right opinion." 
			Matt Jarbo, 
			who goes by
			
			MundaneMatt on YouTube, shared his views with 
			The Daily Caller 
			on the move.  
				
				"They 
				know its almost a non-issue completely," Jarbo said. "But due to 
				the controversies surrounding those videos, they've gotten a 
				much larger spotlight than they deserve."   
				"I do not trust 
				their ability [to automatically flag extremist content]," he 
				said.   
				"I think they 
				have an algorithm in place to help combat those issues, but it's 
				not narrow enough to not impact the skeptical/anti-SJW content." 
			YouTuber 
			
			Jeff Holiday told The Daily Caller that he doesn't worry 
			about the policy affecting his revenue, as he's already diversified 
			his income with other platforms, but worries that the crackdown will 
			affect other creators. 
				
				"The move to 
				counter extremist content is of course a good one in theory," 
				Holiday said.    
				"But the 
				language used in their announcement does not fill me with 
				confidence it will be restricted to legitimate extremism. I 
				remain optimistic but wary."   
				"YouTube has a 
				clear bias given who they choose to promote for free on their 
				site such as Francesca Ramsey who perpetually produces vastly 
				disliked videos," he remarked.   
				"That isn't to 
				say there is a case for them censoring controversial content. 
				I've had a few videos marked advertiser unfriendly, but it 
				hasn't been something perpetual.    
				But hearing 
				they might crack down further does concern me greatly. Again, 
				not for the income, but for the potential disincentives it may 
				cause future creators of controversial politics."   
				"I do think 
				there are valid concerns in Google possibly funding legitimate 
				extremist enterprises, but the fact is that people like to abuse 
				systems, especially automated ones," said YouTuber Chris 
				Maldonado, who's also known as
				
				Chris Ray Gun.    
				"It's really 
				only a matter of time before this backfires in some ridiculous 
				way." 
			The curator of
			
			Undoomed, a channel that regularly makes light of social justice 
			warriors, shared his concerns about YouTube's new direction. 
				
				"No one can 
				really say who's going to be impacted by this new road map, and 
				that's the point isn't it? If their policies and terms of 
				service aren't there to help guide creators anymore, then why 
				even have them?    
				So really, 
				anyone could be at risk without even knowing it," he said.   
				"I have no 
				problem with YouTube cracking down on terrorist recruitment 
				videos and the likes," clarified Undoomed. "What I don't 
				understand is how such videos could've possibly been considered 
				acceptable under the extant TOS and policies."   
				"I think there 
				is a high probably for collateral damage with this new 
				attitude," he said.    
				"Some people 
				could conceivably consider skeptics and anti-SJWs 'extremists,' 
				while all we are doing is arguing for a little common sense, and 
				of course for freedom of speech as demanded by the 
				Constitution."   
				"My suspicion 
				is that 'trusted flaggers' is just a code word for the 'usual 
				suspects'. i.e. the same type of radical left-wing reactionaries 
				that have reshaped Twitter into an Orwellian nightmare," he 
				concluded. 
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