YouTube will pay $24.5 million to settle a 2021 lawsuit alleging it unfairly blocked President Donald Trump’s account after the Jan 6. Capitol attacks.
YouTube has agreed to a $24.5 million settlement in the case brought by President Donald Trump after the platform blocked him from posting videos in the aftermath of the Capitol riot in January 2021.
The streaming platform revealed its plans to restore creators’ accounts on Tuesday in a letter to the House Judiciary Committee. The change comes as YouTube has started relaxing its content moderation ...
Some YouTube creators have begun to see revenue restored on older uploads after the platform made changes to how it treats profanity and sensitive subjects. The move comes after months of complaints ...
The company also said the Biden administration pressured YouTube to remove accounts that did not explicitly violate company rules.
YouTube said Tuesday it plans to reinstate some accounts that it previously banned for violating rules against repeatedly posting misinformation about Covid-19 and the 2020 election.
YouTube is now the dominant hub of family attention in the US. According to the eighth installment of the Precise Advertiser Report: Kids (PARK) from Precis ...
YouTube will allow creators banned under its old COVID-19 and election misinformation policies to return, Alphabet said in a letter to Congress.
YouTube is testing a reinstatement program for channels banned over the past COVID-19 and election misinformation policies.
YouTube has clarified its policies on profanity, including how it reviews content retroactively, its rules about sensitive topics and where creators can have control.
It'll also reinstate accounts banned for spreading misinformation.
YouTube is rewriting its content moderation strategy. With the enws changes the platfrom will be reversing its course on bans for creators removed over Covid-19 and election misinformation, allowing ...