#VoxAdpocalypse: Why YouTube Would Die Before Fixing Harassment

YouTube, the largest video platform in the world, has a priorities problem. As the Google-owned monopoly announces itâs drafting new policies to prevent âcreator-on-creator harassmentâ, administratorâs faux-transparency canât escape the platformâs unspoken business model which ultimately places its corporate profits over its own community.
In the fallout of #VoxApocalypse, an incident where conservative commentator Steven Crowder indirectly incited his fans to harm Vox contributor Carlos Maza, several unrelated creators faced the brunt of demonetization and removal as a result, from reactionary conspiracy theorist Black Pigeon Speaks (who was temporarily removed and reinstated without reason) to secular progressive pundit David Pakman (also frequently demonetised and censored by corporate media, as weâll further discuss). The platformâs game of selective policy enforcement has come into question.
The policy was revealed in a statement from Neal Mohan, Youtubeâs chief product officer, who briefly spoke about the issue at YouTubeâs VidCon keynote a few weeks back. Although YouTube considers these new yet unspecified policies to be âjust as important to the YouTube community as any product launchâ, this is the first time the platform has directly mentioned harassment since the original scandal broke. In turn, I decided to ask questions over their silence.
On Saturday, I released three separate tweets asking YouTubeâs highly used customer service account for help. If you check the page right now, it frequently replies to users regarding their payment processing, site functionality, channel removal, demonetization, etc. Surely the best place to get a response, according to what their tweets always imply. Each tweet gave a simple issue, one regarding how to report harassment, another being glitches in my paid subscriptions and the other the purchase of all five seasons of Daria for around $100 which isnât working.
None of my claims was true, of course. I simply emulated a social media trick from Shaun and Jen, a YouTube creator who baited the platform into responding to the #VoxAdocalypse scandal when it was on-going. The bait and switch being when you give a comment on an unrelated issue, wait for YouTube to respond and divert their attention to the real issues.
I wondered, would YouTubeâs page answer a claim of harassment and potential suicide directly? Would they answer the others posted a minute later instead? Would they do a basic scroll and ignore me? How blatant can their profit over safety practice go? Well, turns out YouTube traded its dog whistles for megaphones in its inhumane service that couldnât take the hint. Instead of just ignoring my claims completely, which would be easy given these claims were immediately one after the other, YouTubeâs always responsive account only played quiet on the harassment issue.
Our interactions were selective, immediately giving me links to their Premium support page, assurances theyâll âtake it from thereâ when payments come through and even replying to my friends randomly asking about their TV not working â within the same harassment thread, keep in mind â fixing their fake issue while never responding to the actual post. The silence got so bad, I first got a response from Bitchute, an anti-big tech independent online video competitor and a platform who I never contacted, who provided me with a link to YouTubeâs harassment page before YouTube.
From this, I found that YouTubeâs Report Abuse section, which does allow for direct claims to be made by users, is layered under a hidden splash page thatâs a blip within YouTubeâs overly complicated and indirect Help Centre. After another search, I found the support page I was replying to hasnât actually responded to any harassment requests since June 6th, almost two full months since the scandal broke.
If I was sincerely needing help, YouTube would continue its months-long silent treatment, even in the implied event of death, before addressing an issue thatâs potentially profitable. Conclusively, we should consider whether varying types of YouTube harassment are more so a feature of the medium rather than a bug. Given their bots or admin team replied to selective post after several demands for comment, following a record of enabling corporate and individual cases of overreach, this is hardly an unfound assumption.
After all, itâs not unlike YouTube, a fundamentally for-profit venture, to bend its rules and enforcement for the sake of good business over democratic argumentation. Pakman, the goodie-two-shoes of the progressive movement, later revealed his show has been subjected to direct manual copyright strike for his fair-use commentary on the CNN debates covering the Democratic Primary. This wasnât some accident where the bots capture overlap of footage and audio and just assume the content is a copy. No, this was a direct case among many others where corporate media is harassing several commentators, using their footage for the sake of democratic argumentation, to hold onto good business relationships at their expense.
This attitude is evidenced in several tweets from CNNâs Matt Dornic, the Vice President of the Communications Team, who falsely accused Pakman of pirating their debate worth âmillions and millionsâ after the strike was invoked without warning. Keep in mind, our publication has reported on how Google started a $300M news initiative which subsidises âauthoritative news sourcesâ to the discredit âfake newsâ during the upcoming elections. Many of which included were left unspecified, but donât be surprised if âthe most trusted name in newsâ is among their ranks.
And this is just the conduct of YouTube as a platform.
It can pick its winners and losers, operating under implied rights and due process, which in turn trickles down to the conduct of commentators like Crowder who try similar bully tactics yet face demonetisation which leaves profits in the hands of Google. The platform doesnât tread lightly when it comes to quick enforcement and reinstatements, and itâs doubtful going to change when the platform builds itself off monetised conflict, whether obscure or maintain.
âThereâs a spectrum on YouTube between the calm section, the Walter Cronkite, Carl Sagan part, and Crazytown, where the extreme stuff is,â said Tristan Harris, a former design ethicist at Google. âIf Iâm YouTube and I want you to watch more, Iâm always going to steer you toward Crazytown.â Without some institutional reforms, from breaking up the platform to a more ethically democratic guideline drafting process, which requires more admins and principles than YouTube would ever freely conduct, the platform will forever leave its enforcement up to chance and its harassment business behind the conference rooms of its elites.

Thanks for reading! This article was originally published for TrigTent.com, a bipartisan media platform for political and social commentary, truly diverse viewpoints and facts that donât kowtow to political correctness.
Bailey Steen is a journalist, graphic designer and film critic residing in the heart of Australia. You can also find his work right here on Medium and publications such as Janks Reviews.
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Stay honest and radical. Cheers, darlings. đ