YouTube CEO Wins ‘Free Expression Award’ Sponsored By Youtube, Then Boasts How Platform Censors Content Creators | RT

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Susan Wojcicki, the CEO of Google's video platform YouTube, was awarded the Freedom Forum Institute's ‘Free Expression Award' in a ceremony sponsored by her own company – despite YouTube's track record of censorship.

In the digital awards ceremony, video creator Molly Burke praised Wojcicki as a leader before the CEO detailed in her acceptance speech how much the platform censors its users.

“The freedoms we have, we really can't take for granted,”

Wojcicki declared, adding that

“we really have to make sure we're protecting them in every way possible.”

Wojcicki, however, went on to argue that

“we also need to make sure there are limits,”

and revealed that the company removed nine million videos in the last quarter, 90% of which were taken down by machines.

She also said there is

“a lot of content that technically meets the spirit of what we're trying to do, but it is borderline, and so for that content we will just reduce – meaning we're not going to recommend it to our users.”

users mocked the irony of Wojcicki receiving an award for , and the video of the ceremony on had garnered more than 400 dislikes and just one like at the time of writing.

“This is the worst form of gaslighting I've ever seen,”

commented one user, while another questioned,

“What's next, Facebook getting an award for respecting privacy?”

One content creator posted a photo showing at least 15 of his videos banned from the platform for “inappropriate content,” and a user wrote,

“Free Expression Award? Are they having a laugh[?] Didn't she just censor the governor of Florida speaking with medical experts[?]”

banned a video of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis talking about the benefits and cons of children wearing face masks with a panel of scientists earlier this month, calling it “medical misinformation.”

Several high-profile users have been banned from , including Infowars founder Alex Jones, British rapper Wiley, and former White House adviser Seb Gorka, while many others have faced various degrees of from content-hiding to demonetization.

Former president Donald Trump, conservative television network One America News (OAN), and the government of Pakistan have also received temporary bans over the past few years.

content creators have frequently spoken out against the platform's censorious policies, with some of the largest figures moving to competing websites in protest. Though many content creators remain on 's platform, an increasing number are using it as a secondary website where their content is posted up to a week after it debuted on another service.

Source: YouTube CEO wins ‘Free Expression Award' sponsored by YouTube, then boasts how platform censors content creators — RT USA News

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