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Bianca Bosker

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What Google Isn't Telling Us About The Video It's Banned In 5 Countries (And Counting)

Posted: 09/18/2012 12:51 pm

Here's what we know: According to YouTube's parent company Google, the "Innocence of Muslims," a film blamed for inciting violence across nations in the Arab and Muslim world, is "clearly within" corporate guidelines. It doesn't violate YouTube's definition of hate speech, which must be against a person, not a group. The film is technically legal in many countries.

And yet YouTube has blocked the film in five countries (and counting). Google "temporarily restricted" access to the film in Libya and Egypt "given the very difficult situation" in the two countries, according to a company spokesperson. Google pulled the video in India and Indonesia because it violated local laws there, and yanked it in Malaysia on Monday after authorities asked to have it blocked because of the "explosive commotions and repercussions at hand." And though the White House asked Google to re-review the video and consider pulling it in the United States, Google has said it will stay online in the U.S.

Censoring a video that doesn't break local laws or violate YouTube's terms of use marks an extraordinary, highly unusual move on Google's part that underscores the responsibility tech companies are now shouldering, by virtue of their outsized reach, to arbitrate free speech, shape international affairs and export values from their home nations.

We're thrust into the uncomfortable position of entrusting freedom of information and expression to Google -- an entity that has corporate values, but not a constitution; answers to shareholders and users, not citizens; and is more transparent than many other companies, but doesn't necessarily have to be.

Here's what we don't know and should ask of a company that handles the majority of search queries worldwide, operates in over 100 countries around the world, sees 72 hours of video uploaded to YouTube every minute and boasts it "acts every day to promote and expand free expression online":

Who decided to pull the video and why? What sort of conversations did Google have with government officials about the film? (And let's not take "none" for an answer.)

Why isn't this censorship, in places where the video is legal?

Has violence subsided in places where YouTube pulled the film? Will it? And will the "temporarily restricted" video be re-posted in places where it's legal as soon as the violence subsides?

Does banning the video reward violence? Is this a lesson that controversial content can be snuffed out if enough people are injured, enough buildings are burned and government officials ask nicely enough?

Would the video have been removed if it was an article?

Would the video have been removed if it had sparked violence by pro-democracy protesters?

Let's imagine a YouTube video of police abusing a political protester spreads in Russia, where it sets off a wave of violent, anti-government protests by pro-democracy groups. Does that video stay, or does it go? When does Google listen to violence, and when does it ignore it? Is all violence created equal?

Would the video have been removed if the violence had been in the United States?

Say a YouTube clip about the Jewish faith -- one that's not hate speech according to YouTube's definition, or technically illegal -- sets off a wave of attacks against synagogues in the United States. Would it be blocked? If not, what does that tell us about the way Google views other parts of the world?

Does Google get to decide when other countries are "ready" for free speech?

And given another chance, would Google have acted the same way? Will it?

Google's response to these events has been ad hoc at best and dangerously haphazard at worst.

The company has made it explicitly clear that it doesn't want to play "gatekeeper". But for the time being, it's stuck policing, judging and, in some cases, booting the controversial content posted to its sites. We should seize on this remarkable sequence of events to evaluate whether, in this admittedly complicated situation, Google lived up to its own values and to our expectations.

Even those who agree with YouTube's decision to pull the video argue that Google has fallen short.

Forbes' Jeff Bercovici calls the removal of the video a "well-meaning mistake," pointing out that the ends haven't justified the means: "[T]here's scant reason to think they're making it better, and in the absence of such justification, it ought to err always on the side of upholding freedom of expression."

Eva Galperin of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a non-profit focusing on consumer rights, argues that Google's move sets a dangerous precedent. "While their goal of trying to tamp down violence may have been sincere, the decision was misguided and opens the door for more censorship in the future," she writes in TechCrunch. Jillian York, also of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, concurs. "[B]y placing itself in the role of arbiter, Google is now vulnerable to demands from a variety of parties and will have to explain why it sees censorship as the right solution in some cases but not in others," she writes for CNN.

According to Columbia Law School professor Tim Wu, in yanking the video, "Google's content-removal process left much to be desired." He argues that "it has become clear that Google needs a better system for dealing with hard speech questions" and suggests Google adopt a Wikipedia model in which the "regional experts or the serious users" from the YouTube community police the content themselves.

We're also seeing the limits of Google's transparency. In response to several questions and an interview request from The Huffington Post regarding the video's removal, a YouTube spokesperson said the company was "not doing any interviews" on the matter and offered the same statement already released to the press, again pointing to a 2007 blog post on its policies:

We work hard to create a community everyone can enjoy and which also enables people to express different opinions. This can be a challenge because what's OK in one country can be offensive elsewhere. This video -- which is widely available on the Web -- is clearly within our guidelines and so will stay on YouTube. However, we've restricted access to it in countries where it is illegal such as India and Indonesia as well as in Libya and Egypt given the very sensitive situations in these two countries. This approach is entirely consistent with principles we first laid out in 2007.

But there's more to be said about this difficult decision made under difficult circumstances. Will Google say it?

The company, which now has unprecedented power to influence the course of world events, from snuffing out pro-democracy movements to shaping elections, needs to answer these questions. With so much power, we need more transparency from a company that is a window to the world.

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Here's what we know: According to YouTube's parent company Google, the "Innocence of Muslims," a film blamed for inciting violence across nations in the Arab and Muslim world, is "clearly within" corp...
Here's what we know: According to YouTube's parent company Google, the "Innocence of Muslims," a film blamed for inciting violence across nations in the Arab and Muslim world, is "clearly within" corp...
 
 
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12:16 PM on 09/27/2012
This is not the first time Youtube has banned videos that were technically legal - KRS-One had a rap video (Real Terrorism) banned for being "too shocking". Anwar al-Awlaki videos were banned citing the "hate speech" clause. Yet somehow everyone is upset that we as Muslims are offended that Youtube would continue to play something that is offensive and promotes hate and intolerance, belittling the faith of 1 out of every 5 people on the planet.

I do not condone the violence that has spread because of the reactions to the video, however I do not condone anyone (yes anyone) spreading hate and intolerance and hiding behind the illusion of Free Speech. There are laws around the world against Anti-Semitism, and Holocaust denial and yet no one else can seek similar protections?

The movie is despicable, the reactions are worse, and the lack of attention given to the video's actual purpose or message is simply irresponsible. It is easier to destroy then it is to build, but the rewards are far greater when one takes the time to build - We as Muslims, as Americans, as Humans, should do more bridge building and move beyond hate, fear and ignorance.
01:03 PM on 09/24/2012
I think every newspaper and magazine in the US and Europe should simultaneously put pictures of Mohammad on their covers. Nothing insulting or degrading, just actual drawing and paintings from the Arab world (Showing the profit was not always sacrilege). I feel this would be a wonderful example of our media taking a true stand for our cherished 1st Amendment. I am sick of Western print refusing to publish a picture of this individual. Not only does it show absolute cowardliness, it shows that they absolutely refuse to fight for teh primary freedom that allows them to exist!
10:38 AM on 09/23/2012
Why isn't the person who posted that video removing that video? I strongly doubt that video is being kept on Youtube simply for free speech reasons. I suspect the person who made that video wants it off of Youtube, but things have gone too far and it's out of his hands. Something is happening that the news media and general public (myself include) are blind to. It is simply goofy and irrational to say that video remains on Youtube because the person who posted it is using his 1st Amendment rights. There is some type of political/diplomatic strategy being used, and it's not because somebody waved the flag for the 1st Amendment.
02:33 AM on 09/22/2012
It doesn't violate YouTube's definition of hate speech, which must be against a person, not a group. The film is technically legal in many countries.

So calling one man a name is hate speech but raging against a whole group is not. Does that also apply to Christians, gays, and Jews?
01:10 PM on 09/24/2012
In the US - there is not such thing as 'hate speech' that can be banned because it may offend someone or some group. In fact, a newspaper could publish any picture or word that may piss of millions of ppl. To pretend this is about an imaginary 'hate law' provision of the constitution is not only loony but a complete fabrication of an issue that is nonexistent and NOT regulated by the constitution. To all the other true free speech believers out there, please remind ppl that the 1st amendment is not for popular images, words or publications. It there to protect unwelcome, unpopular and often offensive imagery, language etc. Every time I read someone in america talk about 'hate speech,' I am totally confounded and shocked at that person's complete and total ignorance about what the 1st amendment does cover and how 'just because someone is offended or doesn't like something' or if the word(s) are racist, antisemitic, anti-religious, anti-gay, anti-any cause de celebre - there is not clause tot he 1st amendment banning it!!!!!!!!!!!!
12:55 PM on 09/27/2012
Which then leads into - who defines what is obscene, profane or indecent? When people argue about censorship and freedom of speech or expression, often the most basic forms of censorship are forgotten because we are so used to it that we find it normal. The "Three pronged" guidance for obscenity, or the general guide for profanity and indecency is very subjective, and when offering things on a world wide forum such as the internet, the sensibilities of the audience are vastly different then those of just the US.

Freedom comes with responsibility.

People, everyone should hate less, and spend more time improving ourselves and others, instead of denigrating others.
09:48 PM on 09/21/2012
Of course information wasn't released on why Google banned the video in these countries. It was likely a compromise with the Obama administration after they asked them to ban it world wide. That is my take.
02:31 AM on 09/22/2012
How about you put on an American army suit and walk the streets of small towns in Afghanistan after they watch that movie. It always is braver to speak from the comfort of your own couch. Why so the cons hate our troops?
11:38 AM on 09/23/2012
I have. 
07:12 PM on 09/21/2012
Criminy. The reaction and behavior of these individuals overseas to something so off the wall, to something that they probably have never seen and in no way has anything to do with our government is really a huge embarrassment to them and their religion. Makes them appear so primitive, weak minded and simply wrong about what they believe. I can't see them convincing very many people around the world to ever consider becoming a member of such a religion.
01:23 PM on 09/21/2012
Googles is a coward. Their only interest is money. They're only doing what all powerful corporations do, protect their wealth and letting others do the killings.
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Nirbija Samadhi
06:07 PM on 09/20/2012
This is really a non-issue!
Google is a business.
And like ALL businesses, Google's managers ARE BOUND to operate according to the different codes of conduct of the different countries in which their company operates.

Time to dispense with the colonialist/imperialist mentality.
This is not, and never is going to be, a world in which all countries' codes of conduct are going to be the same.

When british and US media start reproducing the unattractive topless photos of that british woman, get back to us.
07:34 AM on 09/20/2012
Google is a private company and Youtube is a privately owned webstie. Despite some people's sense of entitlement, Google doesn't really owe anybody shit, and can do whatever it wants on it's website.

Look at it this way, when you go to Youtube.com, you enter Google's house. You can't dictate what Google does in/with it's own house.

If you don't like it, well it's a free Web, host your own video.
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CapSen
Empathy. The faculty to feel what the other feels.
05:25 AM on 09/20/2012
"It doesn't violate YouTube's definition of hate speech, which must be against a person, not a group."

So antisemitic videos are allowed on YT? Racist ones in general?
06:46 AM on 09/21/2012
Like u never seen it before. Is the racism the only content u r looking for? Search "zionist conspiracy" for example. Hope I am being helpful.
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CapSen
Empathy. The faculty to feel what the other feels.
05:21 AM on 09/20/2012
"highly unusual move on Google's part"

Huh? Forgotten Google's censorship and cooperation with the Chinese gov't to crack down on dissidents?

What is this? Double standards is what it is.
11:44 PM on 09/19/2012
Muslims in the mid-east take our government's silence about the video as complicity. Americans see it as a trashy video the government wasn't involved in at all. This clearly demonstrates the deep misunderstanding on both sides.
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08:00 AM on 09/20/2012
what silence are you talking about?
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spriddler
10:20 AM on 09/20/2012
How was the government involved in the video?
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somepeoplecallmethestig
The road goes on forever, and the party never ends
08:40 PM on 09/21/2012
He said wasnt, try reading it again.
11:44 PM on 09/19/2012
Goggle is officially under Sharia law.
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nomadrdw
Zen Druid
04:35 PM on 09/21/2012
just more right wing insanity.
the mere fact that the video is still up in 95% of the world proves this is a lie.
in fact, were Google under Sharia law, people would have already been stoned at the corporate headquarters.
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Opus Fideo
Atheist. Social Democrat. Canadian.
06:13 PM on 09/21/2012
no, they're a private for-profit company looking out for their best interest.
09:30 PM on 09/19/2012
Wonder how many people have actually seen the trailer?
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Bills Catz
Don't believe everything you think.
03:26 PM on 09/19/2012
In other words, the situation threatens the stock options or profit margins. It that what they really mean? LOL
08:50 PM on 09/20/2012
Darn right skippy. That is and should be their first responsibilty, the share holders/owners. It is a private business that is in business to make money.