Skip to main content

YouTube permanently bans white nationalist channel VDARE

YouTube has permanently banned the channel of the far-right wing anti-immigration website VDARE for violating its hate speech policies.

According to a report by Right Wing Watch, VDARE was a gathering place for white supremacists and people who oppose immigration to the U.S. Its founder, Peter Brimelow, is well-regarded in right wing circles, even rubbing elbows with advisors in President Donald Trump’s cabinet, according to the Washington Post. Vox described Brimelow as one of the “founding fathers” of the alt-right.

The site was known for its anti-immigration and racist rhetoric, and for publishing pieces from anti-Semites, eugenicists, and prominent white nationalists, all while Brimelow maintained it was not a white nationalist site.

It also promoted the idea that white people were the “racial and culture identity of America,” and Brimelow has stated that “white people built America.”

In 2019, YouTube suspended and then reinstated VDARE’s channel, VDARE TV. A spokesperson for YouTube confirmed to Digital Trends that the suspension is permanent, and that VDARE was one of 25,000 channels that had recently been permanently suspended.

“We have strict policies prohibiting hate speech on YouTube, and terminate any channel that repeatedly or egregiously violates those policies,” the spokesperson said in an email. “After updating our guidelines to better address supremacist content, we saw a 5x spike in video removals and have terminated over 25,000 channels for violating our hate speech policies.”

The spokesperson also said the updated guidelines included new penalties for creators who repeatedly “brush up against the line,” including removing the ability to make money on YouTube.

Earlier this year, YouTube also suspended the channel of known far-right white nationalists Stephen Molyneux, the American Identity Movement, Richard Spencer, the founder of the Proud Boys Gavin McInnes, and former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke, who was also recently banned from Twitter. Two other prominent right wing YouTubers, Nick Fuentes and Carl Benjamin, had their channels demonetized.

This is the latest example of prominent right wing and far-right wing figures having their posts blocked or fact-checked, or their accounts suspended, on large social media sites. Earlier this year, Donald Trump, Jr., the president’s oldest son, had his Twitter account temporarily suspended for proliferating misinformation about COVID-19. In March, Twitter put fact-check labels on President Trump’s tweets for the first time, and Facebook completely removed one of Trump’s posts, also for spreading misinformation about COVID, in early August.

Maya Shwayder
I'm a multimedia journalist currently based in New England. I previously worked for DW News/Deutsche Welle as an anchor and…
Searches for health topics on YouTube now highlights personal stories
The red and white YouTube logo on a phone screen. The phone is on a white background.

Google and TikTok aren't the only places people look for information on health issues. YouTube is another resource people look to for educating themselves on health-related topics. Now, YouTube has launched a new feature in an attempt to further support those queries in a different way.

On Wednesday, the video-sharing website announced its latest feature via a blog post. Known as a Personal Stories shelf, the new search-related feature will yield a "shelf" of personal story videos about the health topics users search for. Essentially, if you search for a health topic, a Personal Stories shelf may appear in your search results and it will be populated with YouTube videos that feature personal stories about people who have experienced the health issue you searched for.

Read more
This beloved TikTok feature is coming to YouTube Shorts
Two mobile devices showing two people dancing in YouTube Shorts videos.

YouTube Shorts, the video-sharing website's answer to TikTok videos, is getting a new comment reply feature and with it, looks more like its wildly popular competitor.

On Thursday, the new feature was announced via an update to a YouTube Help thread titled "New Features and Updates for Shorts Viewers & Creators." The announcement was posted by a TeamYouTube community manager.

Read more
These new chips could be good news for Copilot+ PCs
The Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus

The first Copilot+ laptops are already out, powered by Qualcomm's impressive new Snapdragon X chip. The first batch of reviews were delayed, and early impressions have observed the hits and misses of the current chips. But a new leak tells us that Qualcomm might have another ace up its sleeve, and there may be hope for these Arm-based Copilot+ PCs yet. What's new? There might be more models of the chip than what we've been privy to so far.

So far, we've seen reviews of the Asus Vivobook S 15, but that's just one of several chips that fall under the Snapdragon X Elite umbrella. According to files for the Adreno GPU driver, there may be not just six, but 10 different models of the Snapdragon X -- and three of those are Plus chips, which we've previously only seen one of.

Read more