NEW YORK (US) – YouTube said on Thursday it was banning content that are aimed at an individual or a group through the means of conspiracy theories such as QAnon or pizzagate that have “been used to justify real-world violence.”
The company said in a blog post it would begin enforcing these expanded hate and harassment policies immediately and would “ramp up” in the weeks to come.
YouTube’s move follows recent crackdowns announced by other major social media companies, including Facebook Inc and Twitter Inc, against QAnon content. Facebook earlier this month said it would remove any Facebook pages, groups and Instagram accounts “representing” QAnon.
QAnon is an unfounded and sprawling conspiracy theory that claims that US President Donald Trump is secretly fighting a cabal of child-sex predators that includes prominent Democrats, Hollywood elites and “deep state” allies. It was named by the FBI as a potential instigator of domestic terrorism.
The conspiracy theory also borrows some elements from the bogus pizzagate theory about a pedophile ring run out of a Washington, D.C., restaurant.
A YouTube spokesman told that the recent ban affected content targeting either individuals or protected groups, such as religious or ethnic groups.
The company’s chief executive officer, Susan Wojcicki, told CNN in an interview this week that many QAnon videos were “borderline content,” which do not violate specific YouTube policies.