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Google CEO Admits Company Must Better Address the Spread of Conspiracy Theories on YouTube (techcrunch.com)

Google CEO Sundar Pichai admitted today that YouTube needs to do better in dealing with conspiracy content on its site that can lead to real-world violence. From a report: During his testimony on Tuesday before the House Judiciary Committee, the exec was questioned on how YouTube handles extremist content that promotes conspiracy theories like Pizzagate and, more recently, a Hillary Clinton-focused conspiracy theory dubbed Frazzledrip. According to an article in Monday's Washington Post, Frazzledrip is a variation on Pizzagate that began spreading on YouTube this spring. In a bizarre series of questions, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) asked Pichai if he knew what Frazzledrip was.

Pichai replied that he was "not aware of the specifics about it." Raskin went on to explain that the recommendation engine on YouTube has been suggesting videos that claim politicians, celebrities and other leading figures were "sexually abusing and consuming the remains of children, often in satanic rituals." He said these new conspiracist claims were echoing the discredited Pizzagate conspiracy, which two years ago led to a man firing shots into a Washington, D.C. pizzeria, in search of the children he believed were held as sex slaves by Democratic Party leaders.

11 of 328 comments (clear)

  1. Believe anything by magarity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    that claim politicians, celebrities and other leading figures were "sexually abusing and consuming the remains of children, often in satanic rituals.

    Seriously, if you think this is true then really isn't it a case of not getting your medication more than a problem with youtube?

    1. Re:Believe anything by RedK · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A few years ago, I would have been hard pressed to believe Allison Mack of Smallville fame would be 2nd in command of a sex trafficking operation.

      Yet here we are.

      --
      "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
      Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  2. Wrong answer. Correct answer is by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Dear representative, surely you're not trying to apply pressure from position of governmental authority on me, the private entity in violation of my first amendment rights? Are you at all aware of the principles outlined in constitution, and why they were put there?"

  3. Or Perhaps... by iCEBaLM · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... they should just stop trying to be the gatekeepers on speech, and let ideas live and die on their merits.

  4. Snowden revelations, then and now by russotto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Then: "Holy shit, the NSA is reading everything! Start encrypting more!"

    Now: "The NSA is reading everything? Ridiculous! Another stupid conspiracy theory, bury it."

  5. Re:Dear moron plastic-eater Luckyo by DaHat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yet.

    Like it or not, at some point many of these sites are going to be regulated under "privately owned public space" type laws, or perhaps even as utilities.

    I'm not calling for it, it's just an obvious result of the degree of power these companies have over so much communication, and the arbitrary nature their policies are enforced.

  6. Make America Gullible Again by Tablizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why don't they teach critical thinking in grade school? I don't understand why there are so many gullible people in the USA who want to stay that way. Maybe preachers are spreading it, and people believe their preacher because of family/town habit? I'm very uncomfortable sharing a country with so many idiots. Large quantities of such people are dangerous. They will get us poisoned, nuked, and/or locked up in Comcast Central Prison one of these days.

    1. Re:Make America Gullible Again by jettoblack · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Think of it like herd immunity for vaccines. As much as I love the internet, it broke through all of the barriers that used to protect us from the spread fake news, and society hasn't yet figured out how to fix it.

      There have always been lots of crazy people spread throughout society, but before the internet, your social interactions were limited to your local community groups. If you didn't want to be ostracized, you had to at least pretend to blend in with local norms. Your choice of media were limited to things like TV, radio, and newspapers which had to appeal to a geographic market rather than a particular bias or viewpoint. These factors acted like herd immunity, protecting these vulnerable crazy people and helping to contain fake news before it could spread.

      Enter the internet. Every crazy and/or dishonest person can now make a direct connection with millions of vulnerable people without geographic, political, or financial barriers. Media outlets can now specialize in highly tailored viewpoints without any consideration for geographic appeal, and have to constantly out-extreme each other to maintain a shrinking slice of viewers. Instead of local social groups helping to contain the spread of misinformation, we now have a positive re-enforcement cycle: the bolder and crazier your fake news, the bigger your audience of gullible people eager to consume more and more outlandish ideas, and the faster it spreads. It's like a virus spreading rapidly through a population that lacks natural immunity.

  7. Re:Probably just had the wrong pizza joint by chiefcrash · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Notice the summary said "discredited" and not "disproven." Pizzagate was never investigated. Police never bothered looking into the claims. We have no idea what happened with it. It may be "discredited" in that the media claims it's false, but it's never been disproven because no one has ever seriously looked into it.

    This is a bit like saying nobody has disproven my theory that you molest sea anemones by candlelight. After all, there's no evidence that it doesn't happen, and nobody has really investigated it...

    Of course, there's no evidence that my theory is correct, or even enough evidence to launch an investigation, but let's not worry about that....

    I have to ask though: why sea anemones?

    --
    Show me on the 1st Amendment bobblehead where the moderator touched you...
  8. Conspiracy theories? by AHuxley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Like Tiananmen Square https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
    Term limits in China?
    Celebrities want their good movie reviews found and bad movie reviews banned?
    Big brands want no results on their DRM efforts?
    Repairing a computer is now a trade in counterfeit parts?
    Time to help Spain with all results about anything to do with any Catalan declaration of independence.
    Not find results about French protester?
    Only find what a German government approves of politically?

    Time for a real search engine again.
    Removing content for the politics of NGO, nations, think tanks, European bureaucrats, faith groups, cults, celebrities will not result is a useful search product.
    Users know what they enjoy search for. Provide that search service to the users and show them some ads. A search engine is not a publisher of content.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  9. Re:Only Approved Conspiracy Theories Are Allowed by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Those aren't "Approved Conspiracy theories". They're just a bunch of straw men you invented to represent everyone who pisses you off.

    --
    Happy people make bad consumers.