
© Reuters / Kim Kyung-Hoon
YouTube has disabled 210 channels for posting content related to the Hong Kong protests "in a coordinated manner,"
following in the footsteps of Facebook and Twitter in restricting its arbitrary censorship to pro-China accounts.
"Channels in this network behaved in a coordinated manner while uploading videos related to the ongoing protests in Hong Kong," Google threat analyst Shane Huntley claimed in a blog
post on Thursday, adding that the Google team's "discovery" was "consistent with recent observations and actions related to China announced by Facebook and Twitter."
Translation? The channels were "sowing political discord" on behalf of the Chinese government, and had to be stopped. How did Google know it was the Chinese nefariously attempting to poison the minds against the protesters?
The "use of VPNs" and "other methods of disguise" - widespread in the era of mass surveillance - was all the proof required to wipe the channels out of existence.Twitter got the anti-China censorship ball rolling earlier this week, in perhaps the first-ever social media preemptive strike
"proactively" deplatforming hundreds of thousands of accounts for the capital crime of "sowing discord." Their crimes included "undermining the legitimacy and political positions of the protest movement on the ground." One could argue that the protests themselves are a form of political discord, but resistance is futile when charged with such an inchoate offense.
None of the social media platforms have ever defined what exactly constitutes "attempting to sow discord," though a common thread running through the mass deplatformings of the past year
suggests it involves posting in support of a government the US doesn't like - whether Russia, Iran, Venezuela, or China.
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