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Censorship Youtube Media The Internet

YouTube Censors Senate Floor Speech With Whistleblower's Name (thehill.com) 382

SonicSpike shares a report from The Hill: YouTube has removed a video from its platform that shows Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) stating on the Senate floor the name of a person who conservative media have suggested is the whistleblower whose complaint triggered the impeachment inquiry of President Trump. The company, home to millions of hours of video content, said in a statement on Thursday that "videos, comments, and other forms of content that mention the leaked whistleblower's name" violate its community guidelines and will be removed from the site. "We've removed hundreds of videos and over ten thousand comments that contained the name. Video uploaders have the option to edit their videos to exclude the name and reupload," Ivy Choi, a spokesperson, said in the statement, which was first reported by Politico.

The video clip removed by YouTube comes from the Senate impeachment trial, when Paul mentioned a name that has circulated in conservative media as the whistleblower. Paul did so after Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts declined to read a question he submitted including that person's name. Paul says he does not know if the name he said on the Senate floor is the whistleblower's or not, but he said it was wrong for his speech to be censored. "It is a chilling and disturbing day in America when giant web companies such as YouTube decide to censure speech," he said in a statement. "Now, even protected speech, such as that of a senator on the Senate floor, can be blocked from getting to the American people. This is dangerous and politically biased. Nowhere in my speech did I accuse anyone of being a whistleblower, nor do I know the whistleblower's identity."
Important to note: Federal whistleblowers are protected from retaliation by the Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA). "This law protects federal employees who disclose illegal or improper government activities," notes Study.com. "Generally, this means the government can't fire, demote, suspend, threaten, harass, or discriminate against a whistleblower."
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YouTube Censors Senate Floor Speech With Whistleblower's Name

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  • by OverlordQ ( 264228 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @06:21PM (#59726038) Journal

    I'm sure there'll be plenty of reasonable discussion here on /.

    • Re:Buckle in boys (Score:4, Insightful)

      by weilawei ( 897823 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @06:27PM (#59726070)

      I think we're long overdue for extending the 1st amendment protections to citizens who use the predominant media of the day for daily communication; namely all these public access platforms.

      We need to start looking at how corporations exert the kind of power formerly reserved for governments.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        It was a statement made in the houses of government. Google censoring it, is as evil as fuck.

        Brought to you today, Google's version of what the government is saying and doing, don't worry, you wont hear or see anything the executives of Google do not agree with.

        Wow the corruption of the democratic process right their, talk about bloody evil. When the government says it, the citizens have a FUCKING RIGHT to hear it, you fuckers at google. Evil is as evil does, not their choice.

        • Re:Buckle in boys (Score:5, Insightful)

          by ClickOnThis ( 137803 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @08:16PM (#59726454) Journal

          It was a statement made in the houses of government. Google censoring it, is as evil as fuck.

          As the discussion here seems to be focused on the First Amendment, it's important to note that Google, YouTube, or whatever non-government entity you want to talk about, has a First Amendment right to determine what speech is broadcast on their platform.

          Brought to you today, Google's version of what the government is saying and doing, don't worry, you wont hear or see anything the executives of Google do not agree with.

          Then go elsewhere. I do that. (Fox News viewers generally don't though.)

          Wow the corruption of the democratic process right their, talk about bloody evil. When the government says it, the citizens have a FUCKING RIGHT to hear it, you fuckers at google. Evil is as evil does, not their choice.

          The First Amendment protects you and me from the government. It does not protect you and me from each other. Or from Google. Or Google from us.

          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            As the discussion here seems to be focused on the First Amendment, it's important to note that Google, YouTube, or whatever non-government entity you want to talk about, has a First Amendment right to determine what speech is broadcast on their platform.

            A corporation has no natural rights at all, because it is not a natural person. It has exactly the rights that we the people choose to give it in law, no ore, no less. No amendments apply in any way.

            The First Amendment protects you and me from the government. It does not protect you and me from each other.

            You and I are humans with right, a corporation is not. "Natural person" is the legal term for a living human being, that is, a person with rights. "Legal person" is the broader category. Legal persons have no natural rights, not being natural persons. Could this be more clear?

            We currently give Google righ

        • When the government says it, the citizens have a FUCKING RIGHT to hear it, you fuckers at google.

          That's right. But the people do not have a right to compel Google to provide even the tiniest iota of assistance. You want to hear it; go sit in the gallery at the US Senate, or find someone willing to let you know what was said.

          • I completely agree with both you, and GP. I think that it is possible to be evil and legal simultaneously—they are not mutually exclusive, and they do not concern the same properties, nor should we attempt to make one into the other. Allowing some small decoupling between the two is part of a healthy system .

            However, I have the opinion that, given the balance of power in today's society, the rapid adoption of technology, and the increasing reliance on it to be heard at all, spaces that are advertised

            • I meant to say a small decoupling between morals and law, but it seems I implied evil and law.

              Strangely still appropriate.

          • by guruevi ( 827432 )

            That would be correct, except that Google is pretending it's a platform or common carrier so it isn't liable for all the crap it does not censor. Once you start censoring one viewpoint over the other (which does not extend to stuff that's clearly illegal you fuck-wits), you're editorializing and you're liable for all the content posted.

          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            That's right. But the people do not have a right to compel Google to provide even the tiniest iota of assistance.

            Google has no right to exist, except as we provide one. We have every right to compel Google to do any thing that it pleases us to so compel, as a condition for allowing it to exist.

      • I think we're long overdue for extending the 1st amendment protections to citizens who use the predominant media of the day for daily communication; namely all these public access platforms.

        We need to start looking at how corporations exert the kind of power formerly reserved for governments.

        No.

        Just no.

        We need to teach the fucking herd that social media is not to be taken seriously.

        It's not YouTube .gov

        • How exactly do you plan to teach the herd that they themselves are not to be taken seriously?

          More reality TV?

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Cylix ( 55374 )

        There is no actual law governing the disclosure of whistle blowers name.

        This is something the media and 'social media' platforms have been using to censor information.

        The actual protection to a whistle blower extends to discrimination and termination. This isn't actually applicable in this case, but the media wants to pretend it is a legal precedent to discourage retaliation.

        There is nothing stopping anyone from disclosing this information legally and any organization censoring it is operating in a manner t

        • Re:Buckle in boys (Score:5, Informative)

          by ClickOnThis ( 137803 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @09:21PM (#59726620) Journal

          Retaliation against a whistleblower may not just take the form of sanctions from their employer. If the whistleblower's name is published, it could lead to online smears, death threats, or worse. It is reasonable for a media-outlet to exercise discretion when a whistleblower could come to serious harm if their identity is exposed. Media are free to restrain themselves voluntarily, even if the law allows them to do something.

          During the 1979-1981 Iran hostage crisis, a Montreal newspaper discovered that 6 US diplomats were holed up in the Canadian embassy in Tehran. Canadian officials learned of the story and pleaded with the paper not to publish the story. The dilemma was obvious: exposing the truth would place people in danger, but burying the story would be a violation of freedom of the press. In the end, the reporter refused to file his story, and he had support at the paper. Instead, the story was delayed until the 6 Americans were spirited out of Iran, posing as Canadian citizens.

          Sometimes it's appropriate for the media to practice discretion.

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            If it were reasonable to believe the widespread disclosure of Eric Ciaramella's name would result in serious harm to Eric Ciaramella, then people could point to the actual serious harm caused to Eric Ciaramella by the already-widespread disclosure of his name as evidence.

            They of course can't, which makes it clear the belief isn't reasonable. People still persisting in refusing to allow the use of Eric Ciaramella's name are being censorious asses for no remotely-rational reason.

            • Re: Buckle in boys (Score:5, Insightful)

              by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Friday February 14, 2020 @07:13AM (#59727550)

              If someone is willing to walk into a pizza parlor with a loaded AR-15 because they heard on the internet it had an underground sex ring involving major political figures, it's reasonable to assume there are people out there crazy enough to go after the whistleblower.

      • The 1st amendment would protects google from having the government determine what they should and shouldn't display. The senator cannot force YouTube to publish his speech in full precisely because of the 1st amendment. What we actually need is a genuinely public platform for people to publish content to the internet but that would cost money and people aren't prepared to pay.
        • by DaHat ( 247651 )

          Except when carveouts related to privately owned public spaces are created, which exist today in other forms in the analog world, and it's just a matter of time before they are brought to the digital one as well.

          No, I'm not advocating for it, I just recognize the direction we are headed.

    • At least the odds of it being taken down on /. and the poster cancelled over it is up around, oh, Powerball territory...

      The ol' non-RTFM dupe-factory might have faults, but aside from one specific instance in its entire 23+ year history (due to a court-issued C&D, IIRC), they haven't taken anything down that I'm aware of.

      • And this is why we keep coming back. There's just nowhere else... Soylent News is the backup to Slashdot.

        • Soylent news is only a backup if you are missing misogynistic and racist viewpoints on any given topic.

          • You can't have Good Censorship without Bad Censorship.

      • by Cylix ( 55374 )

        There is no legal requirement to censor the name of a whistle blower.

        If Slashdot were to censor the name they would be engaging in a mechanism that is in use for a publisher and not a platform provider. They should therefor lose their protection as a public voice.

        Then they would be guilty of any publication that was at odds with the system of law.

        Provided they act as a publisher and do no censor posts then they can claim to be just a publisher and not at risk of acting discriminator in their selection of pu

        • by Cylix ( 55374 )

          Ooops, I meant act as a platform and not a publisher to avoid the risk of discriminatory actions.

          I wish I could edit posts....

        • If Slashdot were to censor the name they would be engaging in a mechanism that is in use for a publisher and not a platform provider. They should therefor lose their protection as a public voice.

          Then they would be guilty of any publication that was at odds with the system of law.

          Provided they act as a publisher and do no censor posts then they can claim to be just a publisher and not at risk of acting discriminator in their selection of published content.

          You are totally wrong, you ignorant fuck.

          Federal law strongly protects Internet services that engage in moderating their content, specifically and expressly in order to encourage them to do so. (The original idea was that they wanted services to censor porn, and had to give them protection to get them to do it)

          It's at 47 USC 230, if you're interested in reading it and, contrary to appearances, have the wits needed to google for it.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @06:30PM (#59726082) Journal
    Medicare has fixed the standard rates for services of doctors. Since it is not paying what he thinks his services are worth, he claimed he too was enslaved.

    By the way he was dropped out of college and his father in law created a board to certify him as an ophthalmologist. If there was a fair God he would be in jail for practicing medicine without license and billing the government for services he was not qualified to provide.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @07:20PM (#59726282)
      he leaves that little bit out. Doctors accept Medicare because a) it's economically advantageous and b) they're doctors, and by and large they like to help people.

      Rand Paul is a terrible person.
      • It's disadvantageous to everyone else.
        Medicare will only pay for a percentage of what something is worth. Usually about 25%. So providers have to list their prices at an exuberant amount so that 25% is closer to 100%. Insurance companies know this, so they are able to negotiate down.

        However, if you are paying cash for a procedure, for all this too work you have to pay the exuberant amount. No price cuts for you. So they get to deal with defaults and bankruptcies from patients who can't pay and pay up the

        • No price cuts for you.

          This is not true. I've done software work for a hospital billing company and yes, the charges were set to high multiples of what Medicare would pay. But if someone was self-pay, they instantly got something like a 66% discount, which brings it back down closer to what commercial insurers would pay.

    • by fred911 ( 83970 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @08:15PM (#59726450) Journal

      'his father in law created a board to certify him as an ophthalmologist.'
      That may or may not be true, but is it really germane?

      The question is, which is more evil.

      Not allow recorded public record to be distributed on your platform.

              Or

      Provide protection for someone that spoke out [right or wrong] for something
      that they though needed to be investigated.

      And, how do you do no evil here?

  • by Facekhan ( 445017 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @06:32PM (#59726092)

    Paul may be protected by the speech and debate clause but there are two big reasons why no social media should be helping this.

    1. It is clearly intended to harass and threaten the whistleblower and anyone else who these trolls might choose to claim is the whistleblower.

    2. What is known is that the whistleblower is an intelligence officer, that the source of the leaks of the person's name had to have come from a person who had signed an NDA to keep government secrets and vis a vis Valerie Plame, it is a Federal crime for someone with that knowledge to reveal the identity of the an intelligence officer in some situations.

    Social media sites should not facilitate either of these crimes.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Strill ( 6019874 )

      He never reported these concerns to his supervisor, as is required of a whistle-blower. He reported them to the Democrat party. That is called a crony informant, not a whistle-blower.

      • Of course he reported it to his supervisor. That's easily verified. Why would you even bother lying about a silly detail like that?
        • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @07:24PM (#59726294)

          Of course he reported it to his supervisor. That's easily verified. Why would you even bother lying about a silly detail like that?

          Lying about something easily verified and/or a silly detail (like crowd size)? You must be mistaken, surely no one would do that -- and certainly not over 14,000 times in just 3 years. :-)

          • You must be mistaken, surely no one would do that -- and certainly not over 14,000 times in just 3 years. :-)

            That's just the court jester's job.

        • Who was the supervisor? Or can we not state that as well, given that it might confirm that Eric Ciaramella is the whistleblower?
        • by guruevi ( 827432 )

          He did and his supervisor (the Inspector General) decided that it was too politically slanted to be admissible as a whistleblower report.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Cyberax ( 705495 )

        He never reported these concerns to his supervisor, as is required of a whistle-blower. He reported them to the Democrat party.

        No. He went through the proper channels and it took several days for the complaint to make its way to the House of Representatives.

        But of course, low-information voters like you don't know a thing.

      • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @09:28PM (#59726642)
        Rand Paul's question rejected by Chief Justice Roberts: “Are you aware that House Intelligence Committee staffer Shawn [sic] Misko had a close relationship with Eric Ciaramella while at the National Security Council together and are you aware and how do you respond to reports that Ciaramella and Misko may have worked together to plot impeaching the President before there were formal house impeachment proceedings?”

        The rephrased question by Ron Johnson that Adam Schiff declined to answer: "Recent reporting described two NSC staff holdovers from the Obama Administration attending an all hands meeting of NSC staff held about two weeks into the Trump administration and talking loudly enough to be overheard saying, ‘We need to do everything we can to take out the President.’ On July 26, 2019, the House Intelligence Committee hired one of those individuals, Sean Misko. The report further describes relationships between Misko, Lt. Col. Vindman, and an individual alleged as the whistleblower. Why did your committee hire Sean Misko the day after the phone call between President Trump and Zelensky? And what role has he played throughout your committee’s investigation?"

        If true that is a Crony Conspirator not Crony Informant.
    • by NagrothAgain ( 4130865 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @07:35PM (#59726336)
      It's now a matter of public Congressional Record, YouTube should not be taking it down, full stop.
    • The name was not outed publicly by a government official. The NY Times published a description of who the whistleblower is (basically a resume without a name), and RealClearInvestigations [realcleari...ations.com] revealed the name shortly after. The third independent source was the impeachment inquiry itself when Schiff's team forgot to redact the name from one of the SCIF transcripts. From then on, it's been some weird 1984 dystopian censorship phenomena where no one at the MSM (including Fox News) dare utter Voldemort's name (

    • Can love of country overwhelm the
      incessant lure of politics? Is there
      anything that good people can
      regard as sacred? I'm not sure that
      anyone is willing to set aside
      mendacity in the search for honesty,
      especially in social media. The
      lurid lights of internet-fame make the
      least meaningful statement
      akin to the utterances of a prophet.

      Can't stop information - it wants to be free.

  • Jesus Christ (Score:2, Insightful)

    by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 )
    Impeachment is over. Just like Clinton, it turned out exactly the way most of us knew it always would in the end because the votes weren't there to ram it through the Senate. The public doesn't give a fuck that the "whistle blower" is named Eric Ciaramella, and when YouTube does stoopid edits like this they're just Streisand-ing things and keeping them alive unnecessarily longer. How many people Googled for his name solely because of the news items triggered by YouTube's theatrics?
  • You have a window in your office, and you see, or think you see, a possible mugging or a fight or whatever outside. You call the cops with "hey, I think I see a bad thing happening." A cop shows up on the street and finds victims and perps, and once he's on the scene he is learning way more than the useless tidbit you gave him and within seconds he's vastly better informed about what's happening than you are.

    Why would anyone care about you anymore? You're already "obsolete." Thanks for the lead, but it you

    • You have an excellent question, I am not sure why this is still an active issue. What happened and how is a real issue, it amounted to an attempted coup. Which useful idiots happened to get used to implement it is hardly relevant, they would have found somebody - There was/is no shortage of people trying to smear the president with 3rd-hand or "made up from whole cloth" information.

      I would also note that no one seems to bother to protect, say, Paula Jones, far from it, they plastered h

      • Cause he "complaint" started all this. Even after everything that has happened no one has seen his testimony or even got to talk to him in any public setting. His testimony has been kept under lock and key by Schiff. They want to figure out if his complaint was legit to start with and what connection's he had to schiff and his staff which they claimed was none before the complaint was file but we know that is a lie. Its also a question that his complaint was all 2nd and 3rd hand hearsay yet why was it enoug
    • Except this situation is more like when you and a buddy worked together, someone was political opponents with your mutual friend and you said you were gonna get him arrested. Then a few months later after your buddy moved to the DA's staff, you called him up and discussed how to write-up a complain about that someone. Then right afterwards the DA changed the rules to allow for hearsay complaints (they used to require first-hand knowledge) and shortly afterwards you sent in a "tip" about how you heard from t

    • Except he didn't see a mugging or fight. He overheard someone talking about what looked like a mugging or fight. Then security camera footage showed something that might look like a mugging but might not, and the alleged victim states he wasn't mugged. His wallet was also still full of cash.

    • The source of an initial tip has to matter, because otherwise the authorities have infinite ability to investigate whoever they want whenever they want with absolutely zero "real" reason for doing so. Are you a cop and need to get into that guys house that you *know* is guilty but don't want to deal with a pesky warrant? Call 911 to report a disturbance, then surprise! You just so happen to be right outside the house in question when dispatch makes the call for somebody to go investigate.

      I'm not sure how
    • The reason this is important is because it may mark the first serious action to arise from a whistleblower complaint where the whistleblower didn't have first-hand knowledge of the event. Getting Ciaramella under oath to testify if he had first-or-second hand knowledge would mean that either there was reason or not to even begin an investigation. Hearsay doesn't cut it.
  • This guy was outed long ago. The intention was for him to testify right up until it was discovered that he coordinated with Schiff's office. Schiff even publicly declared that there was a need for him to testify:
    https://thefederalist.com/2019... [thefederalist.com]

    Schiff then outed the rumormonger himself before redacting his name from a public transcript that was released:
    https://noqreport.com/2019/11/... [noqreport.com]

    Then you Chief Justice Roberts refusal to read a question that his name in it even though the question did not have any ref

  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Thursday February 13, 2020 @07:09PM (#59726238)
    CONNECTION DROPPED
  • The whistle-blower's name is ~ ` ^ &7 [NO CARRIER]

  • Censorship is evil. Censoring what goes on in Congress is wrong and pointless. This is a bad precedent.

    • Well, I mean, historically censorship has been evil because historically it's been the Big Bad State doing it. When it's a private corporation flexing its muscle to control discourse, that's a different animal because free speech includes the freedom to control the channels you own. Freedom is pretty messy in practice, it turns out.

      Anyway, the point is, many consider the total control of owned resources by private entities to be an unmitigated benefit to society. Youtube's house, Youtube's rules.

      • The governments who censor would no doubt also claim to 'own' their channels of information. A coalition of private companies who control all channels of information could be just as harmful as a government in controlling the flow of information for their own benefit.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      This is a bad precedent.

      I see what you did there.

  • You hypocrite fuck. You don't believe any of that bullshit, Rand.

    Your father was 10x the libertarian you are, and he still had no problems calling the statist goons [techdirt.com] to ransack his supporters when it was to his benefit. Too bad they called bullshit and smacked him down [domainnamewire.com] roflmao.

    It's just cheap talking points for your cynical game, the same as every other politician.

  • Trump argued he had a right to know who the whistle blower was so he could "face his accuser." But the thing was, the whistle blower wasn't his accuser. His accuser was Congress. Wanting to name the whistle blower was always just about intimidation and retribution.

    The sort of witness intimidation that Trump engaged in in the past, and seems to want to do now, is more reminiscent of the behavior of petty dictators and mobsters than a government leader. It's scary interesting how fast Americans have turned

  • Also the Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA) does not say anything about censoring to hide a whistleblowers name. So using that as an excuse isn't an excuse.

  • Good job, YouTube!

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