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Posted by u/foxfluff 4 years ago
Tell HN: YouTube is banning accounts that support Ukraine
Reddit is now full of reports of people (and their channels) getting banned for supporting Ukraine or even just watching related live streams. Reddit is also censoring and removing these reports..

https://www.reddit.com/r/youtube/comments/t13wyv/im_banned_a...

https://www.reddit.com/r/youtube/comments/t13h44/so_youtube_...

https://www.reddit.com/r/ukraine/comments/t147c3/defending_u...

throwthere · 4 years ago
We’ll this is just massively embarrassing for YouTube. The Reddit thread will get picked up by National media. YouTube will say the reporting was misuse of their terms and was a cyberattack from state level actors implying their reporting algo isn’t actually at fault. They will mention that the automated algo protects children and at risk people. They will then reinstate the accounts and say they are sorry for the temporary inconvenience and pleased that they could respond so swiftly. And the algos won’t change, not one bit. And there will still be no human oversite of these sorts of bans.
causi · 4 years ago
Google's fetish for serving more users with fewer employees has been responsible for the failure of so many of their initiatives I often wonder who's behind it.
loosescrews · 4 years ago
They are an internet company. This is how internet companies work, generate such high profits, and command such high valuations.

Businesses which scale by hiring are much harder to grow and tend to be a lot less profitable. As a result, internet companies tend to see such businesses as not worth being in. Sure, there are lots of successful companies which operate this way, but Google sees it as an unacceptably high opportunity cost. Rather than pour resources into growing a scale by hiring business, they would rather put the resources toward a different business that they think they can scale with non-linear hiring.

Given this, it surprises me that Google is going after the enterprise cloud business. It is pretty well known that such businesses scale fairly linearly with sales and support staff. My understanding is that they know this and are attempting to scale the business this way instead of their usual strategy of ignoring the issue and hoping it will go away.

noasaservice · 4 years ago
Indeed.

This is the reason I was able to sway the C suite at my last position to avoid anything Google. I'm estimating it's probably around $9m/month revenue they lost from GCE and GApps.

They're simply not trustworthy, no/terrible support, and capricious about arbitrarily holding user's data hostage when some random automated abuse system decides you're horrible.

System Engineers don't let fellow system engineers use anything google for production purposes.

zeruch · 4 years ago
"Shareholders" and the McNamara Fallacy mostly
Tenoke · 4 years ago
At YouTube's scale I don't see how you can have manual reviewers without making it a paid service. The amount of videos uploaded per day is just way too high.
stickfigure · 4 years ago
This is unfair. It's a cyber attack on Youtube, and I'm sure the people at Youtube are frantically working on mitigations. It's an ongoing battle and hopefully Russia is burning their bot networks over this.
kova12 · 4 years ago
I wonder how soon administration recognizes this is a national security threat.
criddell · 4 years ago
I’m not so sure that it’s embarrassing for YouTube, although I think your expected timeline is pretty much spot on.

I don’t think people expect much from YouTube.

risyachka · 4 years ago
Considering they are a data company with heavy AI departments - not be able to differentiate basic russian bots from users is very embarrassing.
kerneloftruth · 4 years ago
Yes, not embarrassing for them -- but is more clarification for us.
HWR_14 · 4 years ago
Embarrassing is not the same as surprising
Aunche · 4 years ago
The problem is that a finite number of human moderators can't win a fight against an infinite number of spammer robots. Also, keep in mind that humans aren't infallible judges, especially if you're reviewing hundreds of videos a day.
tyingq · 4 years ago
It remains amusing to me that Google is able to be stymied by what is probably a ~200 person or less sweatshop of hackers and spammers. It doesn't match all their bravado about their level of expertise in AI/ML, automation, troves of metadata and historical patterns, etc.
TheKarateKid · 4 years ago
I don't believe this argument for a second. Google almost single-handedly solved the problem of email spam a decade ago. And yet, robot accounts are a problem?

For the company that loves encouraging obnoxious Captcha's to self-fund their AI/ML research and data harvest the web, they surely don't seem to like using it on their own platforms.

bushbaba · 4 years ago
When a system involves a human it's harder to massively infiltrate it. Take counting votes. A bad human here or there could fudge the tally of pen on paapper ballots. BUT if you attempted to compromise a large percentage of these human ballot counters, one of the other human counters would start to notice and alert the world to it.

Compromising a system that involves 100k people is generally harder than compromising a computer algo.

ipaddr · 4 years ago
Are you saying they can't tell what the topic of a video is about automatically.. because they can.

Using that information I would implement a system that would figure out the topic and prevent bots flagging that specific content only.

tertius · 4 years ago
I do fall for the argument that oversight would be too costly given the sheer numbers. I don't like it though.
munk-a · 4 years ago
If the oversight you provide as part of your service is unreasonably expensive then you probably shouldn't be in business - if you can't sanely moderate your platform then you also shouldn't be in business. I can rationally accept that argument as quite logical but I can also accept the fact that news papers ran classified ads for years and years without assisting terrorists by giving them a platform to coordinate attacks in plain text on - facebook comes along and suddenly the bar for obfuscated text is "r u rdy 4 the b0mb?"

Companies that are providing such an amazingly affordable service because they're just skipping out on doing moderation don't get to use "Well, doing it the right way would be too expensive" as a defense - that's how you end up with Uber. Uber broke laws, Uber shouldn't exist at this point, something like Uber should exist, but Travis Kalanick should have been fined into near non-existence and not currently be sitting happy on 2.8 billion. We, as a society, need to have standards.

ethbr0 · 4 years ago
Know your customer rules are extremely costly for banks to implement, given the sheer numbers.

But we mandate it because that's the world we want to live in.

The real conversation here is about Alphabet and Facebook's margins. If they're not doing enough, they can spend more and do more.

philipov · 4 years ago
It would be costly, but I am confident that Google has the money. They just don't want to spend it, and I am not sympathetic to that.
InitialLastName · 4 years ago
If your business is impossible to operate at its current scale pro-socially and without negative externalities, it doesn't get to operate at that scale.

Share-holders don't have a natural right to profit off of societally destructive behavior.

bradly · 4 years ago
I’ve work on similar sized systems that utilized a very large human workforce to verify models before release and to monitor/measure production models on a daily basis after release. There are ways to make it efficient.
dhimes · 4 years ago
They allowed it to grow past what they can control. They just didn't anticipate the risk.
rvz · 4 years ago
> And the algos won’t change, not one bit. And there will still be no human oversite of these sorts of bans.

YouTube does not care. They only care when large popular cable TV networks or large partners leave YouTube. When that happens, that is a big frown for advertisers. Small users, creators or live-streamers have no chance against being listened to by YouTube. The algorithms won't ban the partners throwing cash at them but the small users will get banned automatically and YouTube doesn't care and won't care.

That is how it is on YouTube and their private platform with their rules or ToS and we have known for years that they continue to do this and ultimately, they will NEVER change.

khazhoux · 4 years ago
> And there will still be no human oversite of these sorts of bans.

Articles about YT say that 500 hours of video are uploaded every minute. Moderation has to be automated. You cannot throw more humans effectively at this problem.

rndphs · 4 years ago
500 hours of video per minute = 30000 per hour. If a moderator watches 30 hours per week that'd be about 0.2 hours per hour. So you'd need 150,000 moderators to watch every minute. Given that billions of people watch youtube, this is one moderator per ten thousand or more viewers. Also considering most of those videos are not going to be watched by more than a handful of people, you could probably get away with a tenth that by only moderating videos with say 100+ views.

So about 10,000 moderators required. This costs under a billion per year. Given that Youtube brings in $20B + of revenue, I'm sure this would not kill their profits.

josephcsible · 4 years ago
If we're going to go that approach, then I'd rather 100 videos be incorrectly left up than 1 video to be incorrectly taken down.
elliekelly · 4 years ago
YouTube could easily reduce the numerator rather than trying to scale up the denominator. Almost every major subreddit has some minimum karma a user needs before they can participate. YouTube could similarly cap brand new accounts at X minutes of publicly available/searchable video.
megaman821 · 4 years ago
I can't imagine what change they could make to the the algorithms to understand world context at an acceptable level. Reporting on the Russian Ukraine conflict and show a dead body. That is news and should probably be left up. A school shooting and show a dead body. Why did the algorithms leave that up so long?
freeflight · 4 years ago
2017 had a kind of similar situation where YouTube started deleting a whole lot of Syrian civil war related channels [0], apparently due to the algorithm going haywire trying to censor "extremist propaganda".

[0] https://www-nytimes-com.translate.goog/2017/08/22/world/midd...

jquery · 4 years ago
The only thing Google understands is money. A nice fat fine from Uncle Sam for aiding and abetting Russia in violation of sanctions might make them prioritize a fix.
frogpelt · 4 years ago
It may be embarrassing but are they embarrassed?

It's not like they're going to suffer for it.

Dead Comment

seaman1921 · 4 years ago
yes, because human over-site is not viable at that scale. Please educate yourself on the scale of youtube. its not like folks at youtube didn't think of the idea of using humans.

even classifiers with 99.99% precision means hundreds of thousands of videos and channels will be incorrectly marked as abusive every year - we just need to accept that and hope that the automated systems are improved over time.

Shared404 · 4 years ago
> Please educate yourself...

Side note on communication here.

Any time someone uses a phrase like "Please educate yourself on $THING", they lose a lot of credibility, at least in the context of that communication. Why?

1) It comes across as incredibly dismissive of both any knowledge that that individual may have - especially on HN, I'm pretty sure we're all familiar with YouTube's scale - and of the idea that there may be missing information, on either the situation or context for the other persons point of view.

2) It's quite condescending as well - and if someone thinks that you are coming at a conversation from a combative place, they won't want to listen to what you are saying. Why should they listen if they think you don't care?

3) It's often used to paint broad strokes in places broad strokes may not be appropriate, and the phrase being attached to that makes it lose credibility even when it is appropriate.

---

Ok, now a response to the actual content:

I don't know why we've decided to allow things to exist "at scale" willy nilly. If something becomes a net negative "at scale", don't allow it to be "at scale".

No one is entitled to a business model.

anthonygd · 4 years ago
> Please educate yourself on the scale of youtube.

Please be less smug.

YouTube has no right or requirement to operate at that scale. They've consciously decided to scale past what they're able to manage well. This is no different than a developer who produces terrible non-functional code but defends it to their boss by pointing out the line count is really high.

I'd be impressed by their scale only if they managed to maintain some level of quality also.

afavour · 4 years ago
> Please educate yourself on the scale of YouTube

You're being very condescending when it's totally unwarranted. I assure you people are aware of the scale of YouTube.

But why should we give YouTube a free pass? You're talking about the service as if it's a force of nature rather than something human created and managed. Why are they entitled to operate at a scale beyond their own control, all while extracting huge profits?

gdulli · 4 years ago
I love the idea of admitting that scaling up technology arbitrarily can make our lives worse instead of better. But no, the answer is not to accept it and hope that it will get better despite no specific and substantive reason to believe it will.
anonymousab · 4 years ago
Human oversight should be a necessary cost and constraining factor of scale. Can't deal with providing non-kafka-esque support to n-many users? Then you shouldn't have n-many users.
alecbz · 4 years ago
I'm actually not sure this is a question of scale at all? The amount of revenue and the amount of moderation needed both scale with the amount of content.

If anything, YouTube's scale gives it a better chance of being able to address this issue, since there are likely fixed costs here that YouTube can better fund (obviously investing in better automated screening, but also setting up the workflows for human moderation, etc.) I think the only benefit a smaller scale competitor has is that they're less visible and unlikely to be "caught" for hosting content they "shouldn't". But if the rules applied equally to everyone, I think YouTube is strictly at an advantage in being able to implement better human moderation.

spyc · 4 years ago
We need to accept that why exactly?
seaman1921 · 4 years ago
Edit - Firstly, sorry about how the phrase "please educate yourself" sounded - english is not my first language, although that shouldn't be an excuse to sound like an ass in a public forum. What I meant is that the scale of youtube is often underestimated (Eg. stats like the number of abusive channels and videos that they take down every day etc. are just mind-boggling)

Secondly, for the folks saying why should we allow youtube to scale beyond what it can handle, or why should we accept the 99.99% precision ?

It is because I do not see a futuristic society in which humans are doing work like "manual reviews" - to progress humanity we need to automate such manual labour so I support the fact that companies are testing the limits of automatic content moderation - and working to improve it - I see it as a win overall. Adding human reviewers would be a step in the backward direction IMO.

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foxfluff · 4 years ago
Again, simply watching or having watched live streams from Kiev might net you a ban.

> If you watched any Kiev livestream it may have been the reason for your termination. It happened to a lot of us too, it seems some Russian bots have been mass-reporting every single person that watched them

> Yes, yesterday night I watched a livestream. Im shocked

> I also watched a Livestream yesterday night. How i wish I didn't now since my account got terminated.

https://www.reddit.com/r/youtube/comments/t1445p/this_accoun...

gambiting · 4 years ago
Do you lose your entire google account just for watching a stream on YT??? Because if yes, that's an absolute madness
kobalsky · 4 years ago
On the reddit thread the hypothesis is that somehow viewers got mass reported.

I wonder if their accounts were picked up for using the chat or if there's a viewer list that is being fetched via API.

So now if you watch the wrong video and you are in some list. Looks like it wasn't a good idea to have your full name visible and online identity tied to your youtube account.

Damn google for pushing for that crap, google+ was a blight.

throw_m239339 · 4 years ago
Welcome to Google. I know it sounds like cheap answer, but yes, some people lost access to their entire google related accounts including GMAIL and DRIVE when they were banned from specific services, like adsense for instance.
willis936 · 4 years ago
It's never too late to de-google. Use it as a good excuse to switch to a password manager if you aren't using one. If you are then it is much less painful to switch.

Internet identity is too valuable to trust to a company that demonstrates they are willing to fall asleep with an armed grenade in their hand.

monkeybutton · 4 years ago
Does this apply to embedded videos too? Imagine reading a news article during lunch at work and getting your corporate account kicked!
TheFreim · 4 years ago
I don't think YT bans usually affect your google account. I got falsely flagged by a bot for copyright striking a bunch of my own videos which resulted in permanent, apparently unappealable, ban of all my YouTube accounts on that google account but the google account still works just fine.
Saris · 4 years ago
It's a good reason why nothing important should be in an online account these days, it's too easy to lose access.
jimmydorry · 4 years ago
I got banned from this, so yes, it can happen to someone that does not comment on any video, has no videos of their own, and only makes a few comments in these Ukraine live streams.

I did not lose any other Google services during this, just access to youtube.

Thankfully, the ban got reversed today.

Gareth321 · 4 years ago
This is exactly the reason I am migrating away from a Gmail address to my personal domain. I don't think most people realise just how in trouble they are if they lose access to their primary email address.

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Cthulhu_ · 4 years ago
Ukraine has actually discouraged people live streaming or publishing Ukranian troop movement, it's revealing their positions and capabilities to the Russians. I'm sure that's a two way street.

How much live streaming happened on Youtube - and how many accounts were terminated - during the conflicts in the middle east?

MattGaiser · 4 years ago
This could be why YouTube is banning everything. People assume this is anti-Ukraine, but it could be the opposite.
imiric · 4 years ago
One more reason to never watch YouTube logged in or by using any of the official apps. Ideally we should switch to alternative platforms, but the amount of content on YT is unmatched. So try these instead:

- https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp

- https://newpipe.net/

- https://github.com/iv-org/invidious

fsflover · 4 years ago
> Ideally we should switch to alternative platforms

Please consider supporting PeerTube: https://joinpeertube.org.

popctrl · 4 years ago
I noticed something last night watching a live stream of Kyiv.

A lot of accounts were posting the comment '/cam2', with others implying something was happening on cam2. Others were saying that the cam thing was fake. I kind of thought it was a way to find out who was watching the video, since obviously youtube chat isn't going to change the video angle...And now I think that's exactly what it was, for this exact purpose.

One thing is clear, and it's very scary in light of all the NATO press conferences where people are asking if a cyber attack constitutes an act of war: There is a massive war happening on the internet right now. Reps are reluctant to respond to these questions because it's clear that total cyber war has been going on for years.

TigeriusKirk · 4 years ago
How would a bot know to report you? How could it tell you watched a livestream?
altdataseller · 4 years ago
Maybe if you commented on it, liked it or chatted on the livestream. Otherwise I don't see how they know you actually viewed it.
plainnoodles · 4 years ago
Isn't there a "chat"-like feature similar to Twitch, where you can see everyone's usernames?

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jandrese · 4 years ago
This should come as a surprise to absolutely nobody. People have been complaining for a decade now that all automated takedown bots are ripe for abuse are are actively being abused by media cartels. You can't be shocked when systems that enable abuse are abused by foreign intelligence services.

Google has said it is cheaper to ignore the problem and until that changes they aren't going to fix it. And remember that on the other end of these abusive systems are corporations that are willing to sue individuals for literally billions of dollars over sharing files.

Big corporations will not have your back when it could affect their income stream.

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deutschewelle · 4 years ago
tbh what is the harm done to Alphabet/Youtube here? Bunch of alleged russian bots mass report youtuber's account temporarily and Youtube reversed their incorrect ban.

It seems to me the system is working as intended as demonstrated by the reversal of the bans being reported 90 minutes ago.

title written by OP is obvious clickbait. Youtube isn't banning accounts that support Ukraine, the automated queue mod system's threshold has been breached and after a human review on the AI's decision, the bans were reversed.

dutchbrit · 4 years ago
My YouTube channel also got removed, received an email 3 hours ago.

"We have reviewed your content and found severe or repeated violations of our Community Guidelines. Because of this, we have removed your channel from YouTube."

Also posted a message showing support to Ukraine in a Kiev livestream.

dutchbrit · 4 years ago
Update:

Hi ***,

We’re pleased to let you know that we’ve recently reviewed your YouTube account, and after taking another look, we can confirm that it is not in violation of our Terms of Service. We have lifted the suspension of your account, and it is once again active and operational.

We’d like to thank you for your patience while we reviewed this case. Our goal is to make sure content doesn't violate our Community Guidelines so that YouTube can be a safe place for all - and sometimes we make mistakes trying to get it right. We hope you understand, and we’re sorry for any inconvenience or frustration this has caused.

If you have any further questions, please feel free to reach out to us here.

Sincerely, The YouTube Team

desmondl · 4 years ago
Did your entire Google account get deactivated? My Google account is linked to Gmail, GCP/Firebase, Youtube, Drive, and a ton of SSO apps. Used it for the past decade, but I know now not to put all my eggs in one basket so I have backups of my most important data. Still, what happened to you is a big fear of mine.
rg111 · 4 years ago
> My Google account is linked to Gmail, GCP/Firebase, Youtube, Drive

Don't. Have separate accounts for dev stuff, entertainment, storage, social media each.

> and a ton of SSO apps

Never do so. Use a password manager (self-host if you want) and use good old username-password to sign up and log in. I once had all my passwords stored in Chrome leaked in a security breach.

A friend's Gmail was suspended that was connected to bank. He had to waste literally tens of hours in commute and waiting and meetings to change it.

mabbo · 4 years ago
This is what happens when you remove all humans from the loop. The decisions made by software can be manipulated once you have a reasonable estimation of what the software is doing.

This time it's Russia. Next time it will be an American political party (whichever one you don't like). YouTube saved some money on human moderation, and all it cost was selling their platform to the first group willing to abuse the system.

And do you know how they'll respond? By trying to improve the automation. No no, no need to add costs by having humans in the loop, we'll just make better software. Because that's what worked so well for SEO, right?

consumer451 · 4 years ago
> YouTube saved some money on human moderation, and all it cost was selling their platform to the first group willing to abuse the system.

Last week I thought I had invented the phrase "accountability arbitrage" to describe the core FB, Google, section 230 business model. But a quick search found it actually has been previously used in some interesting documents.

I would like to see that phrase used more commonly. It seems important and timely.

https://www.google.com/search?q=%22accountability+arbitrage%...

andrewinardeer · 4 years ago
I'd be willing to wager money this is a cyber operation by a nation state weaponizing YT's automated systems.
ziml77 · 4 years ago
That's what the first reddit post is saying. Which makes sense to me. If YouTube had an interest in blocking support of Ukraine, they wouldn't have replaced the COVID news section on the main page with one for the Ukraine invasion news. All of the US mainstream media (except for one) is taking a pro-Ukrainian sovereignty angle, and that's what shows in the news area.

Seems like Google needs to disable autobans triggered by user reports until they have a solution to filter out the reports originating from Russian-operatred bots.

djrogers · 4 years ago
> All of the US mainstream media (except for one) is taking a pro-Ukrainian sovereignty angle

Which one would that be? I haven’t seen a single US media outlet saying this is a good thing…

kube-system · 4 years ago
This is unquestionably the case. Manipulating the flow of information has been part of Warfare 101 for thousands of years. Russia's manipulation of social media is mature and well documented, during times of non-war. The idea that they would make use of those capabilities during wartime is not just plausible, it's just as plainly predictable as "the soldiers guns probably shoot bullets".
sharken · 4 years ago
It's safe to say that Russian state-sponsored hacker groups have become more skilled since 2017 where NotPetya struck:

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/news/russian-military-almost-certain...

It's not farfetched to think they have something worse planned.

tootie · 4 years ago
I think there's multiple things going on. One is coordinated reporting spam from Russia, two is actual misinformation being posted (tons of Ukraine videos being shared are fake) and mix in the general churn of abusive user behavior (trolling) and YT's moderation algos just can't keep up. I sincerely doubt YT is actively suppressing relevant information on Ukraine. Especially at a company founded by Soviet emigres. It's a very hard thing to get right at scale and they just can't do it.
ravenstine · 4 years ago
YouTube is quickly going on its way to becoming of low relevance. It will take a while, but when even non-controversial YouTube channels have to speak in code words in order to not get demonetized/striked/deleted, you know there's a real problem. I don't know if this banning of Ukraine support is real and, if it is, whether it's intentional or just another round of The Google's Best AI snagging on bugs again, but it doesn't matter. YouTube simply is becoming an nonviable platform to tie to one's business or opinions. At this point, you're not even that likely to get a following without several years of posting videos every day because of just how biased YouTube has become against small creators; you're better off posting on smaller video platforms or even just making your own website.
eldaisfish · 4 years ago
I highly doubt that youtube will become irrelevant any time soon. The infrastructure cost to hosting over a decade of video across the globe is immense and that alone creates a significant moat.

Even if some channels leave, others will take their place quickly. Youtube has sufficient size for that.

ravenstine · 4 years ago
I didn't say "irrelevance". Just low relevance, kind of like how ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, and Fox are all still "relevant", but they mean a fraction to younger generations what they meant to even my generation (Gen Y). They're of such low relevance that those organizations have to pay YouTube to promote their content. There may come a day, maybe in another couple decades from now, where YouTube is paying some TNG platform to cross-post its content in much the same way.

Relevance is a relative term, so I have to apologize for being pedantic here, but I also can't really help it in this case either.

> Even if some channels leave, others will take their place quickly. Youtube has sufficient size for that.

To some extent, yes. That doesn't mean it will be able to keep up with loss forever, especially when it's doing things to outright sabotage new channels.

People will get tired of a mostly PG-rated platform once YouTube truly reaches that point. Cultures shift and change, and if global internet culture swings back to being more like it was in the 2000s, the warm safety blanket YouTube provides will be a totally uncool thing only old people and little kids watch. YouTube will someday have a rude awakening when their pushing of late-night TV and mainstream news clips is no longer a significant ROI to their customers. As for movies, well, they're definitely not the only ones in town for that.

penjelly · 4 years ago
yeah weve seen other video providers come and go, but it feels like nobody else is capable of hosting this much content and having this many active content creators. its kindof sad really, if its not on youtube it probably wont be seen.
onlyrealcuzzo · 4 years ago
YouTube is not going to be the source for breaking news like this. There's too much liability and not much money to be made.

The fact is - less than 2% of content watched is stuff like this.

People are mostly watching work out videos and game streams and sports commentary and so on. Not live streams of wars.

ravenstine · 4 years ago
Well yeah, if you examine YouTube in isolation and disregard how its algorithm surfaces content, then sure, most people watching YouTube are watching workout videos and game streams. And maybe that's how YouTube is defining itself, and that's fine, but that's not how you create cultural phenomena. Likewise, millions of people drink Coca-Cola every day, but no one really gives a shit about Coca-Cola even though nearly 2 billion servings are drunk every day worldwide. But people still write actual articles about coffee for some reason, and that probably has to do with its relative lack of homogeneity and safety (from a taste standpoint). YouTube wants to sell fizzy sugar water, and that's the sort of relevance they will get.

The only reason I point this out as a bad thing is that YouTube long ago represented something else that I think mattered more than cat videos, no matter how small the audience was or is.

ok123456 · 4 years ago
I was watching live streams from Ukraine on TikTok last night. No problems.
Gareth321 · 4 years ago
I have been VERY impressed with Odysee and have been using it more regularly. Just need more creators on there.
rcoveson · 4 years ago
@dang, I'm speaking from a position of ignorance here, but I think this thread is getting flagged, given its age, score, and position on the (currently) second page. It's possible that it has triggered some other less-documented condition, like "political keywords + too many upvotes?" or something, in which case disregard.

If it is the flagging, I think we can agree that if any political thread were ever HN-appropriate then this one is. It would also be nice to have confirmation one way or another, since if it has been that fact in and of itself becomes part of the conversation.