Daily Camera (Boulder)

CEO says company won’t take down antisemiti­c film

- The Associated Press

NEW YORK >> Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said Wednesday the company does not have plans to stop selling the antisemiti­c film that gained notoriety recently after Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving tweeted out an Amazon link to it.

Pressure has been mounting on Amazon to discontinu­e sale of the film, called “Hebrews to Negroes: Wake Up Black America,” since Irving shared the link to the documentar­y with his millions of Twitter followers in October. The synopsis on Amazon says the film “uncovers the true identity of the Children of Israel.”

At The New York Times’ Dealbook Summit in New York City, Jassy said it is difficult for the company to determine what content crosses the line to where Amazon doesn’t make it available to customers.

“As a retailer of content to hundreds of millions of customers with a lot of different viewpoints, we have to allow access to those viewpoints, even if they are objectiona­ble — objectiona­ble and they differ from our particular viewpoints,” the Times quoted Jassy as saying.

He said making decisions about what content to take down is “more straight forward” in some cases, such as when it “actively incites or promotes violence, or teaches people to do things like pedophilia.”

Dozens of celebritie­s, public figures as well as Jewish organizati­ons and the Nets have called on the company to take down the film or add a disclaimer offering an explanatio­n as to why the documentar­y and related book are problemati­c.

Amazon told the newspaper earlier this month that it would look into adding a disclaimer on the documentar­y’s main page. But that hasn’t happened.

The Seattle-based company did not reply to request for comment sent by The Associated Press earlier this month on whether it would add a disclaimer or not. Jassy, who is Jewish, said Wednesday that Amazon has employees that flag content, but scaling that more broadly could be challengin­g.

“The reality is that we have very expansive customer reviews,” he said. “For books that have a lot of attention — and a lot of public attention like this — customers do a pretty good job of warning people when there’s objectiona­ble content.”

Irving was suspended by the Nets on Nov. 3 after he refused to issue the apology that NBA Commission­er Adam Silver sought for posting the link the the film.

He returned after issuing an apology more than two weeks later. He missed eight games.

 ?? ISAAC BREKKEN — AP IMAGES FOR NFL, FILE ?? AWS CEO Andy Jassy discusses a new initiative with the NFL during AWS re:invent 2019 in Las Vega in December 2019. Jassy said Wednesday that the company does not have plans to stop selling the antisemiti­c film that gained notoriety recently after Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving tweeted out an Amazon link to it.
ISAAC BREKKEN — AP IMAGES FOR NFL, FILE AWS CEO Andy Jassy discusses a new initiative with the NFL during AWS re:invent 2019 in Las Vega in December 2019. Jassy said Wednesday that the company does not have plans to stop selling the antisemiti­c film that gained notoriety recently after Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving tweeted out an Amazon link to it.

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