YouTube announces countermeasures against misinformation about abortion
July 22, 2022
0
Photo: Archive YouTube announced on Thursday that it is taking steps to ban misinformation about abortion, nearly a month after the U.S. Supreme Court denied the federal right
Photo: Archive
YouTube announced on Thursday that it is taking steps to ban misinformation about abortion, nearly a month after the U.S. Supreme Court denied the federal right to voluntary termination of pregnancy.
“Starting today and over the next few weeks, we will remove content that instructs about unsafe abortion methods or promotes false claims about the dangers of abortion,” a spokesperson for the platform said. Said.
Google’s video service will add abortion content to its medical misinformation policies, which already prohibit false or misleading content about COVID or vaccines.
“We evaluate our policies”
He cited “claims that abortion is too risky or often causes cancer or infertility” as an example.
“We are constantly evaluating our policies and products as real-life events unfold,” the spokesperson said.
Since the Supreme Court dynamited the right to abortion (in effect in the United States since 1973), some conservative states have already restricted or banned access to abortion interventions.
Google, Meta (Facebook, Instagram) and others have been challenged several times on this by legislators and associations, who keep messages and offers of help online and, above all, urging women to be protected. Do not store too much personal data anymore.
State of Georgia bans abortion after six weeks
Platforms fear that the personal information of women who have abortions or those who assist them (online calls, Uber rides, etc.) will be used against them by prosecutors in conservative states that ban abortion.
Earlier in July, Google announced that users’ location data will be automatically deleted when visiting an abortion clinic.
Abortion Information Panel
Jen Fitzpatrick, vice president of the tech giant, also assured that her teams often “reject” requests from officials when they are “too thorough”.
YouTube also announced on Thursday that it will add an abortion information panel to “give people information from local and international health authorities.”
Independent journalism needs the support of its readers to keep going and have the disturbing stories at hand that they don’t want you to read. Today, with your support, we will continue to work hard for uncensored journalism!
Alice Smith is a seasoned journalist and writer for Div Bracket. She has a keen sense of what’s important and is always on top of the latest trends. Alice provides in-depth coverage of the most talked-about news stories, delivering insightful and thought-provoking articles that keep her readers informed and engaged.