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Opinion

YouTube's owners should be treated as accessories to murder

The video platform is contemptuous of those who point out the hatred and incitement it promotes

March 31, 2022 14:43
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3 min read

When you hear the name YouTube, what pops into your mind? For my kids, it’s videos with online stars I’ve never heard of talking about things I don’t understand. For many of us, it’s fun or interesting clips or – a favourite of mine – obscure 1980s TV shows. 

But for others, YouTube is something very different. It is an essential tool in recruiting followers to their extremist views – followers who, the posters hope, will be fuelled with rage against the evil Jews and, the ultimate prize, will go on to kill in the name of their beliefs. 

If I owned YouTube, I would spend as much of my time as was needed finding ways to root out this extremism from my site. I would consider the entire site poisoned by its presence. I would be wracked with guilty conscience if there was even a hint that any videos I had published had played some role – any role – in terrorism.

But I don’t own YouTube. Google does. And the evidence is that Google not only has no guilty conscience, but that – quite the opposite – it knowingly and actively publishes such videos. Far from being ashamed of them or wanting to prevent their airing, they are keen to see them thrive on the site. And if people are murdered as a result, so what?