Wildly Unpopular YouTube CEO Stepping Down
YouTube’s Susan Wojcicki She will step down as YouTube’s CEO.
Wojcicki joined Google as a 2008 employee and was among the first to join the company. Neal Mohan will replace Wojcicki. According to Reuters, “Mohan, a Stanford graduate, joined Google in 2008 and is the chief product officer at YouTube where he has been focusing on building YouTube Shorts and Music.”
Wojcicki (54), says she will refocus on her life. “family, health, and personal projects.” She was named CEO of YouTube in 2014.
Wojcicki was first known by many after her appearance on the then-recently-launched television series.Brian Stelter, CNN host, hosts Brian Stelter’s show Reliable Sources where she stated that she would ensure censorship wasn’t taking place on her platform.
Wojcicki stated, “Anything that is against the World Health Organization’s stance on Covid will be deemed a violation to YouTube policy.”
YouTube under Wojcicki would suppress voices that challenged official narratives. Russell Brand, a comedian, had a video in which he questioned the Covid-19 narrative removed.
“Earlier this month we did a video about the changing narratives around Covid, the pandemic, and Covid treatments in which we cited information on official government websites, which we misinterpreted,” Brand said that “I’ll have to be careful talking about it now, I don’t want to make the same mistake that’s had one of your videos pulled down and an official warning issued.”
YouTube, together with other Big Tech companies, met with Biden’s administration to discuss censoring information around Covid-19.
As reported by The Post Millennial’s Libby Emmons and Human Events’s Jack Posobiec: Communications across 11 federal agencies reveals that the federal government was under the Biden administration “has exerted tremendous pressure on social-media companies—pressure to which companies have repeatedly bowed,” The New Civil Liberties Alliance is now available in a new release. These social media companies were all part of the Partner Support Portal. They include LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and Instagram.
The CDC invited “all tech platforms” They met to discuss ways to restrict free speech online about Covid. These agencies include the White House and HHS, DHS. CISA, CDC, NIAID. The Office of the Surgeon General.
This is breaking news and will be updated.
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