Categories: YouTube

YouTube Forced To Disable Comments On Livestreams Of White Nationalism Hearing In Congress

This morning, YouTube disabled commenting on at least three livestreams showing the House Judiciary Committee’s hearing about the rise of white nationalism on social media after their respective comments sections were flooded with hate speech and white supremacist memes.

Citing its policy against hate speech, the platform first cut off commenting on PBS NewsHour’s stream, then on the Committee’s official stream, and finally on the stream of white nationalist YouTube channel Red Ice TV, BuzzFeed News reports. Red Ice TV, which has 308,000 subscribers and is based out of Sweden, had notorious white nationalists Henrik Palmgren and Lana Lokteff running live commentary during the video.

(White nationalism, for those who don’t know, is the belief that white people should have their own national identity, that people of color should be a minority population, and that multiculturism is a threat to white people’s continued existence. It’s closely tied to white supremacy and white separatism.)

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Commenters reportedly began leaving anti-Semitic slurs and far-right memes promoting white genocide on the livestreams before the hearing had even begun.

A comment BuzzFeed screenshotted said, “This is nothing but the elites and globalists setting up laws that will be enacted in a single pen stroke against the white race in the future.” That comment was left on Red Ice TV’s stream, and was paired with a $100 Super Chat donation to the channel.

All three channels’ comment sections were disabled within the first hour of the four-hour hearing.

“Hate speech has no place on YouTube,” a company spokesperson told BuzzFeed. “We’ve invested heavily in teams and technology dedicated to removing hateful comments and videos and we take action on them when flagged by our users. Due to the presence of hateful comments, we disabled comments on the livestream of today’s House Judiciary Committee hearing.”

The platform also tweeted about its decision to disable commenting.

YouTube’s handling of hate content has been under an especially microscopic eye lately following the white supremacist massacre in Christchurch last month, which left 50 mosquegoers dead and dozens more injured. It — along with fellow platforms Facebook and Twitter — has faced increased scrutiny in the past few weeks after struggling to contain videos of the massacre, which the shooter livestreamed on Facebook. Critics say big social media platforms need to more stringently monitor hate content at all times, not only when a tragedy occurs.

House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) echoed those sentiments in his opening statement at the hearing, where executives from YouTube’s parent company Google and Facebook were present.

“These platforms are utilized as conduits to spread vitriolic hate messages into every home and country,” he said. “Efforts by media companies to counter the surge have fallen short, and social network platforms continue to be used as ready avenues to spread dangerous white nationalist speech.”

Share
Published by
James Hale
Tags: YouTube

Recent Posts

After cutting 15% of staff and saying goodbye to its CEO, Peloton must figure out what’s next

Peloton is dismissing a chunk of its workforce, including its top executive. Barry McCarthy announced that he is…

2 days ago

Meta is using AI to power brand and creator matchmaking on Facebook and Instagram

Meta is looking to improve creator and brand experiences on its platform by investing in AI. The…

2 days ago

Bob Does Sports cracks a cold one with new “Have a Day” tequila line

Bob Does Sports, the self-dubbed home of "brilliantly dumb sporting adventures" hosted by Robby Berger,…

2 days ago

Billion Dollar Boy launches biz dev community for creators with flagship location in London

Influencer marketing agency Billion Dollar Boy is launching a new membership community that's "dedicated to…

2 days ago

Millionaires: Giulia Amato on faith, finding her niche, and getting up at 4 a.m.

Welcome to Millionaires, where we profile creators who have recently crossed the one million follower…

3 days ago

Creators on the Rise: Celestial Sylvia reads the danger all around us

Welcome to Creators on the Rise, where we find and profile breakout creators who are…

3 days ago