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Alex Jones, who runs Infowars, has used YouTube to build a massive audience for his videos claiming the Sandy Hook shooting was faked.
Alex Jones, who runs Infowars, has used YouTube to build a massive audience for his videos claiming the Sandy Hook shooting was faked. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters
Alex Jones, who runs Infowars, has used YouTube to build a massive audience for his videos claiming the Sandy Hook shooting was faked. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters

YouTube under fire for censoring video exposing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones

This article is more than 5 years old

Platform removed a video exposing Jones’ harmful lies about the Sandy Hook massacre, but has yet to censor Jones himself – raising questions about its approach to fake news

YouTube’s algorithm has long promoted videos attacking gun violence victims, allowing the rightwing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones to build a massive audience. But when a not-for-profit recently exposed Jones’ most offensive viral content in a compilation on YouTube, the site was much less supportive – instead deleting the footage from the platform, accusing it of “harassment and bullying”.

Media Matters, a leftwing watchdog, last week posted a series of clips of Jones spreading falsehoods about the 2012 Sandy Hook elementary school massacre, a newsworthy video of evidence after the victims’ families filed a defamation lawsuit against the Infowars host. But YouTube, for reasons it has yet to explain, removed the video three days after it was published, a move that once again benefitted Jones, who is now arguing that the defamation suit has defamed him.

The video was censored for several days, but reinstated Monday after the Guardian’s inquiry and backlash on social media. Still, the case offered yet another stark illustration of the way tech companies and social media algorithms have failed to distinguish between fake news and legitimate content – while continuing to provide a powerful platform to the most repugnant views and dangerous propaganda.

“This just shows the capriciousness and arbitrariness by which they are enforcing these standards,” said Angelo Carusone, the president of Media Matters.

Jones, who has faced numerous lawsuits accusing him of spreading harmful misinformation, has skyrocketed to international fame by fueling a range of conspiracy theories that suggest high-profile mass shootings in America may have been “false flags” or hoaxes, in which the government and “crisis actors” staged the tragedies to push new gun laws.

YouTube, which is owned by Google, has been instrumental in promoting Jones’ channel to new followers, helping him garner millions of views to false news that has had devastating real-world consequences.

Shooting victims’ families and survivors have faced widespread abuse and harassment, with some conspiracy theorists facing arrest and prison for their death threats and attacks. One fake news story about Hillary Clinton, widely promoted by Jones and Infowars, led to a shooting in a Washington DC restaurant.

Media Matters’ seven-minute video – titled “What Alex Jones said about the Sandy Hook shooting” – offered examples of the host sharing blatantly false information, calling the massacre that killed 20 children an “inside job” and “completely fake”, one time saying, “it just pretty much didn’t happen.”

Francine Wheeler, the mother of Ben Wheeler, 6, who was killed at Sandy Hook, at a recent gun violence forum held in Washington. Photograph: UPI / Barcroft Images

Those quotes are critical now that Jones, in the face of litigation, is alleging that the families’ lawsuit has accused him of making statements he never actually said.

“There was an actual news component to this,” said Carusone, noting that the high-profile student activists from Parkland, Florida had also been sharing the video.

YouTube told Media Matters the video was “flagged for review” and that the company determined it violated “harassment and bullying” policies. Media Matters also received a “strike”, a preliminary penalty that can lead to an account being altogether shut down.

YouTube declined to answer questions about the video and has not explained whether Jones or his associates flagged the video or if the company considered the rightwing commentator to be a harassment victim.

After Media Matters wrote about the censorship and the Guardian inquired, YouTube reinstated the video. A spokesperson said in an email: “With the massive volume of videos on our site, sometimes we make the wrong call. When it’s brought to our attention that a video or channel has been removed mistakenly, we act quickly to reinstate it.”

Media Matters noted that dozens of Sandy Hook videos were still permitted on Jones’ YouTube page, including some the watchdog had used in the compilation. Videos labeled “Crisis Actors Used at Sandy Hook!”, “Sandy Hook was a Total False Flag!” and “Retired FBI Agent Investigates Sandy Hook: MEGA MASSIVE COVER UP” all remained live on Jones’ channel on Monday.

Jones videos have had a long-term impact, Carusone noted. “Years later, parents of these students are still receiving attacks and threats.”

The incident has also served as a reminder that tech companies like Google and Facebook have, in the face of pressure from conservatives, worked to show they are unbiased, Carusone said.

“They are extraordinarily sensitive to their rightwing critics.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • Facebook, Apple, YouTube and Spotify ban Infowars' Alex Jones

  • Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones seeks to dismiss Sandy Hook defamation lawsuit

  • Facebook suspends US conspiracy theorist Alex Jones

  • Sandy Hook parents sue Infowars host Alex Jones for defamation

  • Suit claims Infowars' Alex Jones stoked harassment of Charlottesville witness

  • InfoWars sued by man Alex Jones falsely identified as Parkland gunman

  • 'Taking them down fuels it more': why conspiracy theories are unstoppable

  • Alex Jones reported to be working on book about 'the war for your mind'

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