I don’t know what I did but now I can browse incognito and no one will know and I can look up ways to kill and how to build grenades and more.
11 April 2021
#GodofAbraham
#Jesus
News Release
@MikeArchives
@jeffdavisshow
https://t.co/CeSFPlHyri
https://t.co/iLb8XyyAn6
https://t.co/aiodZwluxh
https://t.co/DqHX7Ij9ev
https://t.co/apiGFYRqA6 https://t.co/fsax9ckZ06
https://t.co/bMIkJBZuLK
https://t.co/aiodZwluxh https://t.co/sqhiasqiff
Just a reminder that Google is a white supremacist/fascist company.
Google Blocks Advertisers from Targeting Black Lives Matter YouTube Videos
An investigation by The Markup found that YouTube parent company Google blocks advertisers from using dozens of social and racial justice terms, including Black Lives Matter, to find YouTube videos and channels upon which to advertise. At the same time, Google offered advertisers hundreds of millions of choices for YouTube videos and channels related to White supremacist and other hate terms when we began our investigation, including “all lives matter”—a phrase frequently used as a dismissive rejoinder to Black Lives Matter—and “White lives matter”—which the Southern Poverty Law Center describes as both a neo-Nazi group and “a racist response to the civil rights movement Black Lives Matter.”
Google spokesperson Christopher Lawton declined to answer any questions for this story but took no issue with our investigation or findings. After reviewing them, the company did not lift its ban on the social and racial justice terms we shared, but it did block the hate terms that we had pointed out were in contradiction with them, including “White lives matter” and “White power.” The company also responded by blocking even more of the 62 social and racial justice terms on our list. When we began our investigation, Google Ads only blocked a third of them for searches. Now it blocks more than 80 percent, adding dozens of terms to its blocklist, including “Black in Tech,” “Black excellence,” and “antiracism.”
Google’s ad buying platform Google Ads also blocks the term “Black power,” a phrase associated with the African American civil rights movement but offered more than 100 million YouTube videos and channels it said were related to the White supremacist phrase “White power.” "
Also blocked are: queer, homosexual, black is beautiful, etc.