Docket (FTC-2025-0023) FTC Request for Comment on Censorship and Deplatforming

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If only we had an agency to do this for the financial system. (banks, CCs and PPs)
Oh yeah, credit card companies have been censoring... such as imposing Western SJW values on Japanese media companies (or so I heard).

(Credit card companies do so by refusing to process payments for companies or individuals who do business in things they do not like?)
 
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I want a few words in on the use of AI bots and spamming to hide human communications on public forums. The recent findings on reddit and the allegations of state-funded actors using public forums as propaganda distribution networks demands addressing to prevent our forums from being assignable to the highest bidder.
 
i think i deserve more subscribers. should i complain to the government that in my opinion the algorithm is not treating me fairly?
 
Here's what I got out of Deepseek:

I am submitting this comment in response to the FTC’s Request for Information regarding technology platform censorship and anti-competitive practices, with a focus on YouTube, Reddit, and the financial deplatforming of controversial websites like Kiwi Farms. Below are documented examples of unfair, deceptive, and collusive conduct by platforms and financial intermediaries that harm competition, free expression, and consumer trust.



1. YouTube’s Opaque & Discriminatory Moderation

A. Content-Based Demonetization & Removal

YouTube routinely suppresses or demonetizes videos discussing disfavored topics (e.g., COVID-19 policies, election integrity) under vague "guideline violations," while permitting identical content from mainstream outlets.

  • Example: Independent journalists had videos removed without clear explanations, while corporate media retained monetization for similar coverage.
  • Harm: Creators lose income; consumers are denied access to diverse viewpoints.

B. Shadowbanning & Algorithmic Suppression

  • Example: Channels criticizing Big Tech saw organic reach drop by 70%+ without policy strikes. Appeals yielded only automated responses.
  • Evidence: Leaked internal documents (e.g., "YouTube Insiders") confirm ideological bias in moderation.

C. Advertiser & Government Pressure

  • Example: Post-2020 election, YouTube mass-removed videos discussing fraud after pressure from federal agencies (e.g., FBI, CDC).
  • Anti-Competitive Impact: Smaller platforms (e.g., Rumble) lack resources to absorb such pressure, entrenching YouTube’s monopoly.

2. Reddit’s Arbitrary & Collusive Censorship

A. Uneven Policy Enforcement

  • Example: Subreddits like r/The_Donald were banned for "hate speech," while ideologically aligned communities (e.g., r/AgainstHateSubreddits) remain active despite similar content.
  • Example: Moderators of r/WatchRedditDie documented admins secretly altering post visibility without notification.

B. Financial Deplatforming of Users

  • Example: Users discussing controversial topics (e.g., gender ideology) reported sudden bans from Reddit’s monetization programs (e.g., Reddit Gold, ad revenue) with no appeal process.

C. Collusion with Payment Processors

  • Evidence: Reddit has cooperated with payment processors (e.g., PayPal, Stripe) to defund users based on off-platform speech, violating reasonable consumer expectations.

3. Financial Deplatforming of Kiwi Farms & Retaliation Against Josh Moon

A. Kiwi Farms’ Debanking

  • Example: In 2022, Cloudflare (under pressure from activists) dropped Kiwi Farms, followed by payment processors (PayPal, Stripe) and hosting providers, effectively erasing the site from the internet.
  • Harm: Set a precedent for "financial censorship"—where banks/payment processors act as unaccountable speech regulators.
  • Anti-Competitive Impact: Smaller platforms cannot survive arbitrary financial blacklisting, cementing Big Tech’s dominance.

B. Retaliation Against Josh Moon (Kiwi Farms Founder)

  • Example: Moon was banned from GitHub, Patreon, and even personal banking services (e.g., Chase) despite no legal violations.
  • Evidence: Emails show coordination between activist groups and financial intermediaries to isolate Moon.
  • FTC Relevance: Demonstrates how financial services now act as extensions of tech platform censorship, violating Section 5 of the FTC Act.

4. Anti-Competitive Coordination

  • Trade Associations: The Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM) unites platforms, advertisers, and banks to enforce uniform speech rules.
  • Example: After GARM’s 2021 "brand safety" summit, YouTube/Reddit expanded demonetization categories (e.g., "conspiracy theories").
  • Collusion: Payment processors (Visa, Mastercard) adopted identical blacklists, strangling disfavored platforms.

Requested FTC Action

  1. Investigate:
    • YouTube/Reddit’s inconsistent policy enforcement and algorithmic suppression.
    • Financial intermediaries (banks, payment processors) colluding to deplatform lawful entities (e.g., Kiwi Farms).
  2. Enforce:
    • Penalize deceptive claims of "neutrality" by platforms.
    • Scrutinize payment processors under Section 5 for unfair discrimination.
  3. Promote Competition:
    • Break up Google/YouTube’s monopoly over video hosting and ad markets.
    • Restrict banks/payment processors from acting as speech arbiters.
 
Some of these comments are quite interesting...it seems like a good amount of them are r*dditors complaining about their gay platform being...well...gay... 2025-05-04-075008_1366x768_scrot.webp
 
All one can hope for is this to not be abused in a way in which people will cry for censorship that is not there, only for it to affect someone (or something) that has had nothing to do with it.
It will.

I want to be an optimist but this looks like something almost made to be abused by interest groups with deep pockets and teams of lawyers at their disposal.
 
I want a few words in on the use of AI bots and spamming to hide human communications on public forums. The recent findings on reddit and the allegations of state-funded actors using public forums as propaganda distribution networks demands addressing to prevent our forums from being assignable to the highest bidder.
Until I can go on reddit and see a full page disclaimer apologizing for all the psy ops the site condones (Such as the blatant anti white bia) and publicly condemns all the bad actors on it's site I will not be happy. The fed should be raiding its headquarters.
 
It's not restricted to USA.
But restricted by us govtinfluence.
Looking for info & examples.
Ok, I wasn't sure if they'd be like we don't care not in our jurisdiction. But then like you said they may be looking for general infractions and because they're US companies.

I might have a think in the week and write something small up. I haven't been a victim of it much personally, especially by platforms and not mods in those communities, but I have a little and seen a LOT.
 
For the request of the FTC and interested participants,

Outlined in their 'About' page, the platform, YouTube, prides itself by describing its mission as "Our mission is to give everyone a voice and show them the world. We believe that everyone deserves to have a voice, and that the world is a better place when we listen, share and build community through our stories." However, recent and past events have shown the contrary. The two-faced preferential system has silenced groups while allowing opponents to lambast, accuse, and slander with no accessible means of protest and defense. YouTube has since declined from a community-driven platform to a de facto publishing company silencing opinions as dissent, censoring words as problematic, and flagging common users as extremists. A publishing company should not possess the rights of a platform that is supposed to serve in the interests of the public as a digital forum for discourse, communities, and projects.

Initially YouTube began blanket censorships as they received pressure from prominent household name companies, however it was soon realized that this was simply pretext to undermine the Classical Liberal values of Freedom of Speech, Expression, and Assembly. Only a fringe minority of content on YouTube fits within the parameters of extremist, but they conveniently extended the range of persecution to those with a political leaning right of Socialist. Both Conservative and Liberal factions have been flagged as problematic, and content exposure and access severely hindered the already strained communities that cannot grow due to the pressures of censorship.

YouTube being a monopoly is owned and funded by Google, an entity receiving partnerships and government contracts with the US government. The resources they have from the luxury of falling under the lordship of Google have left competition lagging woefully behind, with only Twitch (owned by Amazon) having at least a minimally visible presence in the Internet. Alternative platforms like Rumble, Odyssey, and Bitchute are functioning with a persecuted community of free thinkers, skeptics, and ideologues but growth is limited due to the rising costs of infrastructure and Google's domineering monopoly over the World Wide Web straining competition. Fox news host, Dan Bongino, was one of the many people victimized by YouTube's draconian policing during the Covid-19 Crisis and their abuse of regulating information since. He has since found a spot in Rumble to continue his journalism, but his reach is severely limited after Google's censorship and blacklisting of him and similar content creators.

The censorship, however, has proven to be notoriously ineffective. As the masses wizened up to the AI censorship, users have resorted to adapting their language and speech to circumvent the algorithm just to express the God-given liberties of free speech. Flagged users cannot say the word 'suicide' under any circumstance, so many would reinterpret the keyword as simply 'unalive' which is enough to fool the AI. As inconvenient as it is, users should not be undergoing several checks and self-censorships on a platform professing that everyone deserves to have a voice.

Frighteningly enough, this censorship has also failed to address the growing problems of the looming botnets that are harassing fringe and flourishing communities. Bots have plagued channels advertising cryptocoin scams, malware, pornographic content (including CSAM). Moreover, bots have also been used to exploit Google's censorship algorithm and silence opponents critical to their own organizations. Politically, Russian troll farms in 2023, when the Russian/Ukraine War began, exploited YouTube's content policing and mass-flagged critics of Russia, and YouTube unwittingly suspended heaves of accounts, many American, that supported Ukraine's resistance, because the AI automatically assumed that an account being mass-flagged should be suspended without contest, only for the user to spend his own time appealing the suspension that can take an afternoon to a week. Mass-flagging still affects users and YouTube is simply ignoring these problems.

It is not enough that they proclaim they will fix this in due time. Google must be broken up for competition to resume and a healthy ecosystem can foster once again in Cyberspace. They are proven perjurers, dismissive and oppressive to users that represent a diverse array of opinions. Such entities should not be allowed to control and govern legacy and branch communities that they only inherited, not created, after buying YouTube on 9 October 2006.

-Anonymous

I may have embellished a bit, but that's Google's problem as far as I'm concerned.

Also, thank you kids and shitposters

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Shitpost2.webp

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I hope that we will finally see the great rape and purge of reddit and extermination of redditoids, if all goes well with this KF will be restored to its former glory and a bunch of trannies will cope seethe and kill themselves. In all seroiusness though i hope the FTC actaully goes through with this and doesnt blueball us because this can be a force of real positive change.
 
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If DRUMPF kills Reddit, I will happily welcome the orange Zionist dictatorship for the rest of my life
 
I used Braves Leo AI to write this one out if anyone wants to use it?

Big tech companies often implement content moderation policies that can inadvertently or intentionally suppress speech that is protected under the First Amendment. While the First Amendment applies to government actions and not private entities, tech companies wield significant influence over public discourse. They justify their content removals based on community guidelines aimed at preventing harassment, hate speech, and misinformation. However, these guidelines can be vague and inconsistently applied, leading to the suppression of protected speech, such as political dissent or satire. This raises concerns about the balance between corporate responsibility and the preservation of free speech rights in the digital age.
 
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