The world’s largest video platform has told content moderators to favor “freedom of expression” over the risk of harm in deciding what to take down. By Nico Grant and Tripp Mickle Reporting from San ...
YouTube is tweaking its profanity-related rules to allow creators to monetize videos with swearing in them, provided the profanity is limited to the first seven seconds of the video. In November 2022, ...
SAN FRANCISCO — For years, YouTube has removed videos with derogatory slurs, misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines and election falsehoods, saying the content violated the platform’s rules. But since ...