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In May this year, Sen. Joseph Lieberman demanded YouTube to
block videos depicting assassinations, death of US soldiers, as well as weapon
training and speeches that encourage violence and could be used as a tool to
create homegrown terrorists.
Although the immediate response was not the one expected by Sen.
Lieberman, four months later YouTube answered his prayers, posting a warning in
its community guidelines meant to stop such videos from being uploaded on
YouTube; however, this doesn’t mean YouTube’s policy has changed.
YouTube argued that it is impossible to preview all videos
before allowing them to appear on the site, since approximately 13 hours of
video are being uploaded every few minutes. That being said, the website will
continue to rely on the user community to report the videos that break these
guidelines.
Earlier this year, YouTube removed over 80 videos that
violated content regulations, following Sen. Lieberman’s recommendations. However,
the content uploaded on the website every minute remains hard to control.
According to YouTube’s revised guidelines, users are not
encouraged to post videos depicting bomb making, or graphic and gratuitous
violence. “If your video shows someone getting hurt, attacked, or humiliated,
don’t post it,” YouTube warned, otherwise you will have your account banned.
Sen. Lieberman released a statement regarding YouTube’s new
standards for videos, saying that YouTube represented a tool for Islamist
terrorist organizations to recruit and train followers; however, the stronger
community guidelines should decrease the number of videos on YouTube produced
by al-Qaeda and affiliated Islamist terrorist organizations, he added.
Sen. Lieberman hailed
YouTube’s decision to strengthen its standards, however, he also continued to
urge Google, who owns YouTube, to remove all videos produced by Foreign
Terrorist Organizations, not just those that violate community guidelines.
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