San Francisco Chronicle

YouTube cracks down on QAnon

- By Kevin Roose

YouTube on Thursday became the latest social media giant to take steps to stop QAnon, the sprawling proTrump conspiracy theory community whose online fantasies about a cabal of satanic pedophiles running the world have spilled over into offline violence.

The company announced in a blog post that it was updating its hate speech and harassment policies to prohibit “content that targets an individual or group with conspiracy theories that have been used to justify realworld violence.” The new policy will prohibit content promoting QAnon, as well as related conspiracy theories such as Pizzagate, which falsely claims that top Democrats and Hollywood elites are running an undergroun­d sextraffic­king ring from the basement of a Washington pizza restaurant.

Other social networks have also taken steps to curb the spread of QAnon, which has been linked to incidents of violence and vandalism. Last week, Facebook hardened its rules related to QAnon content and compared it to a “militarize­d social movement” that was becoming increasing­ly violent. This week, several smaller platforms, including Pinterest, Etsy and Triller,

also announced new restrictio­ns on QAnon content.

Under YouTube’s new policy, which goes into effect Friday, “content that threatens or harasses someone by suggesting they are complicit” in a harmful theory like QAnon or Pizzagate will be banned. News coverage of these theories and videos that discuss the theories without targeting individual­s or groups may still be allowed.

The QAnon movement began in 2017, when an anonymous poster under the handle “Q Clearance Patriot,” or “Q,” began posting cryptic messages on 4chan, the notoriousl­y toxic message board, claiming to possess classified informatio­n about a secret battle between President Trump and a global cabal of pedophiles. QAnon believers — known as “bakers” — began discussing and decoding them in real time on services including Reddit and Twitter, connecting the dots on a modern rebranding of centurieso­ld antiSemiti­c tropes that falsely accused prominent Democrats, including Hillary Clinton and liberal financier George Soros, of pulling the strings on a global sex traffickin­g conspiracy.

Few services played a bigger role in moving QAnon from the fringes to the mainstream than YouTube. In the movement’s early days, QAnon followers produced YouTube documentar­ies that offered an introducto­ry crash course in the movement’s core beliefs. The videos were posted on Facebook and other platforms, and were often used to draw new recruits. Some were viewed millions of times.

QAnon followers also started YouTube talk shows to discuss new developmen­ts related to the theory. Some of these channels amassed large audiences and made their owners prominent voices within the movement.

“YouTube has a huge role in the Q mythology,” said Mike Rothschild, a conspiracy theory debunker who is writing a book about QAnon. “There are major figures in the Q world who make videos on a daily basis, getting hundreds of thousands of views and packaging their theories in slick clips that are a world away from the straight to camera rambles so prominent in conspiracy theory video making.”

YouTube has tried for years to curb the spread of misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories on its platform, and tweak the recommenda­tions algorithm that was sending millions of viewers to what it considered lowquality content. In 2019, the company began to demote what it called “borderline content” — videos that tested its rules, but didn’t quite break them outright — and reduce the visibility of those videos in search results and recommenda­tions.

The company says that these changes have decreased by more than 70% the number of views borderline content gets from recommenda­tions, although that figure cannot be independen­tly verified. YouTube also says that among a set of proQAnon channels, the number of views coming from recommenda­tions dropped by more than 80% following the 2019 policy change.

Social media services have been under scrutiny for their policy decisions in recent weeks, as Democrats accuse them of doing too little to stop the spread of rightwing misinforma­tion, and Republican­s, including Trump, paint them as censorious menaces to free speech.

YouTube, which is owned by Mountain View’s Google, has thus far stayed mostly out of the political fray despite the platform’s enormous popularity — users watch more than 1 billion hours of YouTube videos every day — and the surfeit of misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories on the service. Its chief executive, Susan Wojcicki, has not been personally attacked by Trump or had to testify to Congress, unlike Jack Dorsey of Twitter and Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook.

Vanita Gupta, chief executive of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, a coalition of civil rights groups, praised YouTube’s move to crack down on QAnon content.

“We commend YouTube for banning this harmful and hateful content that targets people with conspiracy theories used to justify violence offline, particular­ly through efforts like QAnon,” Gupta said. “This online content can result in realworld violence, and fosters hate that harms entire communitie­s.”

Rothschild, the QAnon researcher, predicted that QAnon believers who were kicked off YouTube would find ways to distribute their videos through smaller platforms. He also cautioned that the movement’s followers were known for trying to evade platform bans, and that YouTube would have to remain vigilant to keep them from restarting their channels and trying again.

“YouTube banning Q videos and suspending Q promoters is a good step,” he said, “but it won’t be the end of Q. Nothing has been so far.”

 ?? Al Drago / New York Times ?? A QAnon hat seen in the crowd at President Trump's flyin campaign rally in Mosinee, Wis., in September. YouTube is tightening its content policies against the sprawling proTrump conspiracy theory community.
Al Drago / New York Times A QAnon hat seen in the crowd at President Trump's flyin campaign rally in Mosinee, Wis., in September. YouTube is tightening its content policies against the sprawling proTrump conspiracy theory community.

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