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Increasingly, YouTube is becoming an outlet for citizen journalists, documentarians, and other users to publish accounts of what is happening in their daily lives. It is inevitable that some of these videos will contain content that is violent or graphic in nature.
It’s not okay to post violent or gory content that’s primarily intended to be shocking, sensational, or gratuitous. If a video is particularly graphic or disturbing, it should be balanced with additional context and information.If posting graphic content in a news, documentary, scientific, or artistic context, please be mindful to provide enough information to help people understand what's going on. In some cases, content may be so violent or shocking that no amount of context will allow that content to remain on our platforms. Don't encourage others to commit specific acts of violence. Violent content that is not accepted includes inflicting unnecessary suffering or harm to animals as well as encouraging or coercing animals to fight.
If the violence shown in your video is particularly graphic, please make sure to post as much information as possible in the title and metadata to help viewers understand what they are seeing. Providing documentary or educational context can help the viewer, and our reviewers, understand why they may be seeing the disturbing content.
For instance, a citizen journalist who captures footage of protesters being beaten and uploads it with relevant information (date, location, context, etc) would likely be allowed. However, posting the same footage without contextual or educational information may be considered gratuitous and may be removed from the site.
originally posted by: Swills
a reply to: worldstarcountry
Should we feel bad for you or think YouTube is apart of a grand cover up conspiracy when you knowingly break their rules?
Increasingly, YouTube is becoming an outlet for citizen journalists, documentarians, and other users to publish accounts of what is happening in their daily lives. It is inevitable that some of these videos will contain content that is violent or graphic in nature.
It’s not okay to post violent or gory content that’s primarily intended to be shocking, sensational, or gratuitous. If a video is particularly graphic or disturbing, it should be balanced with additional context and information.If posting graphic content in a news, documentary, scientific, or artistic context, please be mindful to provide enough information to help people understand what's going on. In some cases, content may be so violent or shocking that no amount of context will allow that content to remain on our platforms. Don't encourage others to commit specific acts of violence. Violent content that is not accepted includes inflicting unnecessary suffering or harm to animals as well as encouraging or coercing animals to fight.
If the violence shown in your video is particularly graphic, please make sure to post as much information as possible in the title and metadata to help viewers understand what they are seeing. Providing documentary or educational context can help the viewer, and our reviewers, understand why they may be seeing the disturbing content.
For instance, a citizen journalist who captures footage of protesters being beaten and uploads it with relevant information (date, location, context, etc) would likely be allowed. However, posting the same footage without contextual or educational information may be considered gratuitous and may be removed from the site.
If you wanna post this stuff then go to a site that allows it, like www.liveleak.com... And that site is popular as hell so why only YouTube?
originally posted by: KansasGirl
originally posted by: Swills
a reply to: worldstarcountry
Should we feel bad for you or think YouTube is apart of a grand cover up conspiracy when you knowingly break their rules?
Increasingly, YouTube is becoming an outlet for citizen journalists, documentarians, and other users to publish accounts of what is happening in their daily lives. It is inevitable that some of these videos will contain content that is violent or graphic in nature.
It’s not okay to post violent or gory content that’s primarily intended to be shocking, sensational, or gratuitous. If a video is particularly graphic or disturbing, it should be balanced with additional context and information.If posting graphic content in a news, documentary, scientific, or artistic context, please be mindful to provide enough information to help people understand what's going on. In some cases, content may be so violent or shocking that no amount of context will allow that content to remain on our platforms. Don't encourage others to commit specific acts of violence. Violent content that is not accepted includes inflicting unnecessary suffering or harm to animals as well as encouraging or coercing animals to fight.
If the violence shown in your video is particularly graphic, please make sure to post as much information as possible in the title and metadata to help viewers understand what they are seeing. Providing documentary or educational context can help the viewer, and our reviewers, understand why they may be seeing the disturbing content.
For instance, a citizen journalist who captures footage of protesters being beaten and uploads it with relevant information (date, location, context, etc) would likely be allowed. However, posting the same footage without contextual or educational information may be considered gratuitous and may be removed from the site.
If you wanna post this stuff then go to a site that allows it, like www.liveleak.com... And that site is popular as hell so why only YouTube?
What problem do you have with him posting it on YouTube? The video to which he's referring doesn't contain any gore. It's way milder than showing people getting beat up, which YouTube says they would probably allow.
All his shows is a bus, at a distance, with blacked out windows, bursting into flame. And even that only lasts for a second before smoke obscures the bus completely.
There has been quite the barrage of rockets as well as Iron Dome interceptions, although where did the ATGM's come from to destroy the bus?? That is quite a curious question.
originally posted by: Agit8dChop
looks fake to me..
you can hear the rocket exhaust but cant see it
in all the syrian movies, you see the rocket swirling toward a target
nothing in this one
looks fake
originally posted by: deckdel
a reply to: worldstarcountry
IDF confirmed their Lt.Col died on mission. Might be this one?
originally posted by: worldstarcountry
At the risk of having my youtube channel terminated, again, for the third time since 2017 for simply uploading exclusive battle footage from around the world, especially in relation to CJTF-OIR and the war in Syria, I found the video of the IDF bus that was destroyed by Palestinian resistance and uploaded it. I set age restrictions and practically wrote an essay disclaimer in hopes of keeping away the dreaded strikes and removal of the video, which I originally found on twitter here
There has been quite the barrage of rockets as well as Iron Dome interceptions, although where did the ATGM's come from to destroy the bus?? That is quite a curious question.
The destroyed bus looks very close to the one from this video at the end
Assuming that was the same bus, which is possible but not verified, it begs the question how can the IDF claim only one person was injured when a moving bus was completely obliterated ... All the foreign and domestic media cites the IDF spokesman tweet that only one person was injured. I just cannot imagine that being the case seeing the bus as it is.
originally posted by: Swills
originally posted by: KansasGirl
originally posted by: Swills
a reply to: worldstarcountry
Should we feel bad for you or think YouTube is apart of a grand cover up conspiracy when you knowingly break their rules?
Increasingly, YouTube is becoming an outlet for citizen journalists, documentarians, and other users to publish accounts of what is happening in their daily lives. It is inevitable that some of these videos will contain content that is violent or graphic in nature.
It’s not okay to post violent or gory content that’s primarily intended to be shocking, sensational, or gratuitous. If a video is particularly graphic or disturbing, it should be balanced with additional context and information.If posting graphic content in a news, documentary, scientific, or artistic context, please be mindful to provide enough information to help people understand what's going on. In some cases, content may be so violent or shocking that no amount of context will allow that content to remain on our platforms. Don't encourage others to commit specific acts of violence. Violent content that is not accepted includes inflicting unnecessary suffering or harm to animals as well as encouraging or coercing animals to fight.
If the violence shown in your video is particularly graphic, please make sure to post as much information as possible in the title and metadata to help viewers understand what they are seeing. Providing documentary or educational context can help the viewer, and our reviewers, understand why they may be seeing the disturbing content.
For instance, a citizen journalist who captures footage of protesters being beaten and uploads it with relevant information (date, location, context, etc) would likely be allowed. However, posting the same footage without contextual or educational information may be considered gratuitous and may be removed from the site.
If you wanna post this stuff then go to a site that allows it, like www.liveleak.com... And that site is popular as hell so why only YouTube?
What problem do you have with him posting it on YouTube? The video to which he's referring doesn't contain any gore. It's way milder than showing people getting beat up, which YouTube says they would probably allow.
All his shows is a bus, at a distance, with blacked out windows, bursting into flame. And even that only lasts for a second before smoke obscures the bus completely.
I made my statement very clear, what about don't you get?
And to be very clear, I don't care that he posts on YouTube but don't come crying when they ban your channel for constantly breaking their rules. It's no censorship, they're a private platform just like ATS and have their rules. I don't even know if you're allowed to post real life violence/gore on ATS either. Either way, it's their house. It's censorship when the gov't hides it from you.
So like I said, why is he only posting on YouTube crying censorship when there's plenty of other options that will allow him to post said videos? Should I feel like a victim too while crying censorship? Funny enough, people elsewhere on the net say ATS censors posters as well. People are dumb.
originally posted by: KansasGirl
originally posted by: Swills
originally posted by: KansasGirl
originally posted by: Swills
a reply to: worldstarcountry
Should we feel bad for you or think YouTube is apart of a grand cover up conspiracy when you knowingly break their rules?
Increasingly, YouTube is becoming an outlet for citizen journalists, documentarians, and other users to publish accounts of what is happening in their daily lives. It is inevitable that some of these videos will contain content that is violent or graphic in nature.
It’s not okay to post violent or gory content that’s primarily intended to be shocking, sensational, or gratuitous. If a video is particularly graphic or disturbing, it should be balanced with additional context and information.If posting graphic content in a news, documentary, scientific, or artistic context, please be mindful to provide enough information to help people understand what's going on. In some cases, content may be so violent or shocking that no amount of context will allow that content to remain on our platforms. Don't encourage others to commit specific acts of violence. Violent content that is not accepted includes inflicting unnecessary suffering or harm to animals as well as encouraging or coercing animals to fight.
If the violence shown in your video is particularly graphic, please make sure to post as much information as possible in the title and metadata to help viewers understand what they are seeing. Providing documentary or educational context can help the viewer, and our reviewers, understand why they may be seeing the disturbing content.
For instance, a citizen journalist who captures footage of protesters being beaten and uploads it with relevant information (date, location, context, etc) would likely be allowed. However, posting the same footage without contextual or educational information may be considered gratuitous and may be removed from the site.
If you wanna post this stuff then go to a site that allows it, like www.liveleak.com... And that site is popular as hell so why only YouTube?
What problem do you have with him posting it on YouTube? The video to which he's referring doesn't contain any gore. It's way milder than showing people getting beat up, which YouTube says they would probably allow.
All his shows is a bus, at a distance, with blacked out windows, bursting into flame. And even that only lasts for a second before smoke obscures the bus completely.
I made my statement very clear, what about don't you get?
And to be very clear, I don't care that he posts on YouTube but don't come crying when they ban your channel for constantly breaking their rules. It's no censorship, they're a private platform just like ATS and have their rules. I don't even know if you're allowed to post real life violence/gore on ATS either. Either way, it's their house. It's censorship when the gov't hides it from you.
So like I said, why is he only posting on YouTube crying censorship when there's plenty of other options that will allow him to post said videos? Should I feel like a victim too while crying censorship? Funny enough, people elsewhere on the net say ATS censors posters as well. People are dumb.
I'm saying you don't understamd the point. His video doesn't show gore. Youtube allows footage of PEOPLE BEATING OTHER PEOPLE UP, and this video simply shows a bus bursting into flames for a quick second and then the bus can't be seen anymore. The point is that Youtube's rules are inconsistently applied and some people feel the reason for that is that the YouTube censors have an agenda and therefore allow some things but not others, according to their agenda.
Get it? No, I don't you think you do, Swills.
Al-Masdar News
The Al-Qassam brigades, of Hamas, blew up an Israeli bus with a guided anti-tank missile. Israel initially claimed that the bus was full of civilians. Hamas then provided the video, showing that Israel was lying, the bus was packed with military men. The secretary general of Hezbollah, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, claimed that his organization were the ones to smuggle the anti-tank missiles into Gaza.