USA TODAY US Edition

Slain journalist’s father files complaint with FTC

Seeks removal of graphic videos from YouTube

- Jazmin Goodwin

Andy Parker’s daughter, Alison Parker, was shot and killed on live television more than four years ago. Now, Andy Parker is taking on YouTube and parent company Google to remove graphic content from the video site including the murder videos of his daughter.

Parker along with Georgetown University Law Center’s Civil Rights Clinic filed a complaint Thursday with the Federal Trade Commission against YouTube and Google for deceptive practices on its platform. The complaint alleges YouTube violates its terms of service by hosting videos that gruesomely depict violent murders and conspiracy theories that harass and target families.

“They have a responsibi­lity to parents, kids and the public, in general, to ensure people aren’t exposed to this horrific content. They should be protected from this stuff,” said Parker.

Alison Parker, a 24-year-old news reporter in Roanoke, Virginia was shot and killed along with cameraman Andy Ward by a former co-worker during a live televised interview in 2015. The gunman, Vester Lee Flanagan, fled the scene before posting the graphic video of the murder on his Facebook and Twitter accounts. The video spread widely and has since been shared thousands of times across YouTube.

Since 2015, Parker has tried several times to have videos taken down of his daughter’s murder that still exist on YouTube. Parker says the responses he’s received from both companies have been “outright lies.”

He alleges YouTube’s refusal to remove the videos are rooted in a financiall­y incentiviz­ed motive. Parker says that, to this day, he’s never seen the video of his daughter’s death.

“Mr. Parker, understand­ably, refuses to watch these videos,” the complaint says. “He further cannot stand the thought that videos of his daughter’s murder are being used to promote dangerous conspiracy theories, for monetary gain, or simply for pleasure or shock value.”

But videos like the one of Alison, aren’t the only ones that still persist on the site, Parker charges. The complaint cites four other examples including videos of live streams posted to other social media platforms.

“Videos of Alison’s murder are just a drop in the bucket. There are countless other videos on YouTube depicting individual­s’ moments of death, advancing hoaxes and inciting harassment of the families of murder victims, or otherwise violating YouTube’s Terms of Service,” the complaint reads.

YouTube said that the site “rigorously” enforces its policies“using a combinatio­n of machine learning technology and human review and over the last few years, we’ve removed thousands of copies of this video for violating our policies.

“Our Community Guidelines are designed to protect the YouTube community, including those affected by tragedies,” its statement said. “We specifical­ly prohibit videos that aim to shock with violence, or accuse victims of public violent events of being part of a hoax.”

The complaint is the first of its kind to challenge YouTube on its far-reaching disseminat­ion of murder and conspiracy theory videos, Georgetown Law’s Civil Rights Clinic says. It argues YouTube’s failure to comply with its own terms of service and remove the murder videos are associated with consumer deception under the Federal Trade Commission Act of 2018.

“Under the FTC Act, YouTube has an obligation not to deceive its users, including parents who believe their children are protected from viewing violent content,” said Aderson Francois, the clinic’s director. “The FTC must act to ensure that YouTube follows its own rules and ends its practice of callously subjecting families like Mr. Parker’s to trauma and harassment.”

The clinic and Parker call for YouTube to change its “lax content monitoring process” or face millions of dollars in fines..

In 2018, the clinic filed a complaint with the FTC alleging YouTube channels were collecting kids’ personal informatio­n without parental consent. The action resulted in $170 million in fines against YouTube-parent Google.

 ?? PARKER FAMILY ?? Alison Parker, with her father Andy, was killed on air in 2015.
PARKER FAMILY Alison Parker, with her father Andy, was killed on air in 2015.

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