YouTube takes down Xinjiang videos | EU wants emergency team for 'nightmare' cyber-attacks | TikTok insiders say social media company is tightly controlled by Chinese parent ByteDance
YouTube takes down Xinjiang videos | EU wants emergency team for 'nightmare' cyber-attacks | TikTok insiders say social media company is tightly controlled by Chinese parent ByteDance
aspiicpc.substack.com
Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. A human rights group that attracted millions of views on YouTube to testimonies from people who say their families have disappeared in China's Xinjiang region is moving its videos to little-known service Odysee after some were taken down by the Google-owned streaming giant, two sources told Reuters…Following inquiries from Reuters as to why the channel was removed, YouTube restored it on June 18, explaining that it had received multiple so-called 'strikes' for videos which contained people holding up ID cards to prove they were related to the missing, violating a YouTube policy which prohibits personally identifiable information from appearing in its content.
YouTube takes down Xinjiang videos | EU wants emergency team for 'nightmare' cyber-attacks | TikTok insiders say social media company is tightly controlled by Chinese parent ByteDance
YouTube takes down Xinjiang videos | EU wants…
YouTube takes down Xinjiang videos | EU wants emergency team for 'nightmare' cyber-attacks | TikTok insiders say social media company is tightly controlled by Chinese parent ByteDance
Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. A human rights group that attracted millions of views on YouTube to testimonies from people who say their families have disappeared in China's Xinjiang region is moving its videos to little-known service Odysee after some were taken down by the Google-owned streaming giant, two sources told Reuters…Following inquiries from Reuters as to why the channel was removed, YouTube restored it on June 18, explaining that it had received multiple so-called 'strikes' for videos which contained people holding up ID cards to prove they were related to the missing, violating a YouTube policy which prohibits personally identifiable information from appearing in its content.