Breaking: Is the Church of Scientology Suppressing Free Speech? YouTube Removes More Videos

Author: Dawn Olsen
Published: February 15, 2008 at 1:35 pm
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There are so many elements to how voting and internal promoting is done on social media sites, like YouTube, Digg, Propeller, Reddit and so on, that I couldn't begin to comprehend how it all works.

This, however, does not mean there isn't something strangely coincidental about certain videos being removed from YouTube. As I understand, videos are promoted and pushed to the front page based on views and a voting/rating system.

A few weeks back, the internet activist group calling themselves "Anonymous" released a video on YouTube in response to the infamous Gawker/Tom Cruise Scientology video showdown.

Initially, YouTube pulled the clip featuring popular actor and Scientology spokesperson Tom Cruise who was featured in a video that was intended to be shown in Scientology centers exclusively. The CoS lawyers served YouTube with a cease and desist letter, and the video was subsequently pulled from the site.

Gawker, on the other hand, ignored the letter from Scientology and continues to host the video on their site.

After this public flap, Anonymous released their own video in essence airing their grievances with CoS and stating their intentions to "dismantle" the organization for its various alleged abuses, number one being a systematic suppression of free speech.

Since this first video appeared, there have been several tit for tat videos and copycats popping up all over YouTube, but with the original one titled "Message to Scientology" receiving over 2 million views.

Now, the current issue is that video has been removed completely from the site (though several anonymous members have posted mirror versions of the video since, in their own effort to stop what they deem as heavy-handed attempt to suppress not only the video, but free speech.)

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Article Author: Dawn Olsen

A veteran blogger since 2002, Dawn has written for many different blog incarnations ranging from parenting, politics, popular culture, music and everything in between. Her writing can be found Blogcritics.org and her celebrity blog, Glosslip.com. }

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