WebProNews

Tag: YouTube

  • YouTube Down Just In Time For Google’s Earnings Call [Updated]

    Update 2: We just received a statement from a YouTube spokesperson:

    “Some users encountered errors, or a slower than normal experience on YouTube today. Our engineers worked quickly to address the issue and fixed the problem within minutes. We’re sorry for any inconvenience this caused our users.”

    Update: It’s back, in time for the call.

    YouTube is down. Here’s what we’re seeing:

    YouTube Down

    Twitter is going crazy.

    This just happens to come at a time when Google is getting ready to do its earnings call, which is supposed to be available via webcast on YouTube. There was already one Google earnings-related debacle today.

    We’ve reached out to Google for comment, and will update if and when we receive a response.

  • Louis C.K. Talks reddit, Pushing the Comedy Limits, and More with Tony Hawk

    If you were ever curious about what it would be like to see skateboarding legend Tony Hawk sit down and interview the greatest living comic, Louis C.K., wonder no more.

    Hawk caught up with Louis C.K. during one of the comedian’s tour’s stops in Detroit and proceed to discuss a wide range of topics including reddit, Louie, Dane Cook, and pushing the limits of comedy.

    Tony Hawk obviously thinks quite a bit of Louis C.K., saying that he’s “smart, funny, poignant, crude, inappropriate and innovative; all the qualities of a genius in my opinion.” I’m positive that most of the internet agrees. Check out the entertaining (and a bit awkward) interview below:

    The interview was posted to Tony Hawk’s new YouTube channel, RIDE, which debuted earlier this year.

    [via UPROXX]

  • Felix Baumgartner’s Freefall Video And Its Lego Counterpart

    On Sunday, Felix Baumgartner broke the sound barrier, and set world records as he jumped from outer space to the Earth below. The event was the result of five years of preparation, and Baumgartner now holds the records for highest jump from a platform (128,100 feet), longest distance freefall (119,846 feet), and maximum vertical velocity (833.9 mph, Mach 1.24).

    Watch this:

    The whole thing was livestreamed on YouTube.

    “At peak, you were watching more than 8 million concurrent livestreams of this mission, which intended to break 50-year old records of human limits and break new ground in medical and scientific research,” says YouTube Sports Partnerships Manager Tim Katz.

    Here’s a bit more background on the jump from YouTube’s blog:

    The 120,000 foot jump over Roswell, New Mexico is the culmination of over five years of work by Felix and the Red Bull Stratos mission team, who are now prepared to break the 102,800 ft record set by US Air Force legend, Col. Joe Kittinger 52 years ago. After rising in a capsule propelled by 30 million cubic feet of helium, Felix will jump from 23 miles above Roswell, New Mexico. You’ll see a live data feed that will show exactly where Felix is in the sky, his rate of speed during the freefall, and how high above earth he is throughout the entire flight. You’ll also be able to hear Felix’s conversations with Col. Kittinger who will be the only voice from Mission Control advising Felix.

    Luckily, the whole thing was reenacted with LEGOs (h/t: The Daily What). Here’s that:

  • Muslims Protest Outside Google UK Headquarters Over “Innocence Of Muslims” [Video]

    On Sunday, thousands of Muslims (around 3,500 according to The Huffington Post, but more like 10,000 according to The Telegraph) gathered in protest outside of Google’s London HQ over the company’s refusal to remove the controversial Innocence Of Muslims film from YouTube.

    Some held signs saying, “Larry Page supports terrorism.”

    Here’s a video from the protest that has been uploaded to YouTube:

    Here’s a video the Telegraph has shared:

    Here is what YouTube (Google) has said in a statement (via The Telegraph) regarding its refusal to remove the video in question:

    “We work hard to create a community everyone can enjoy and which also enables people to express different opinions. This can be a challenge because what’s OK in one country can be offensive elsewhere. This video – which is widely available on the Web – is clearly within our guidelines and so will stay on YouTube.”

    If one goes to view the video on YouTube, they are met with the following message before they can click through to watch it:

    The following content has been identified by the YouTube community as being potentially offensive or inappropriate. Viewer discretion is advised.

    The option to not display this warning in the future is available.

    “Innocence of Muslims” is also the top search suggestion from Google’s autocomplete when you get as far as typing “Inn”.

    The protests were reportedly just the first in a series, which, according to the Telegraph, will include a “million-strong march in Hyde Park” in the coming weeks.

  • Google Changes How YouTube Ranks Search Results

    YouTube, often touted as the second largest search engine, just made a change to how it ranks content. The company announced in a blog post that it has just started adjusting the ranking of videos in YouTube search to “reward engaging videos that keep viewers watching.”

    In other words, the more of the video that viewers are actually watching, the more likely it is to rank higher in search results compared to its competitors.

    “This is a continuation of ongoing efforts to focus our video discovery features on watch time, and follows changes we made to Suggested Videos in March, and recent improvements to YouTube Analytics,” YouTube says.

    We reported on the Analytics changes here. In the “Views” report, YouTube will now show you more time watched data. “Estimated minutes watched” can be seen from this report now, and users can choose other data options from the “Compare metric” drop-down.

    “The experimental results of this change have proven positive — less clicking, more watching,” says YouTube of the rankings adjustment. “We expect the amount of time viewers spend watching videos from search and across the site to increase. As with previous optimizations to our discovery features, this should benefit your channel if your videos drive more viewing time across YouTube.”

    It does stand to reason that if the videos that are getting more viewing time from users are appearing near the top of search results more frequently, that more people will spend more time watching YouTube videos. Sounds like a win for advertisers.

    It makes you wonder how much weight Google gives to the time spent on site metric in its web search results.

  • Only 3% Exclusively Live-Streamed the Presidential Debate

    Only 3% Exclusively Live-Streamed the Presidential Debate

    Despite the fact that the first Presidential debate was available to be streamed live, for free, on YouTube (and other outlets), only a small fraction of American chose to watch the contest live on their computer or mobile device.

    Out of those surveyed in a recent Pew Research poll, 56% said that they watched the first debate between President Obama and Mitt Romney live. Out of those live viewers, only 3% watched it via the internet exclusively – but 11% of those surveyed said that they spread their viewing across television and online at the same time, making them the coveted “dual-screener” group that online sites and social media outlets like to tout.

    The point is, television still rules. 85% said that they watched the debates live on their TVs exclusively.

    Unsurprisingly, the numbers change when you look at different age groups. Young people were much more likely to use the internet to watch the debate. Among respondents aged 18-39, 10% streamed the debate online exclusively, and 22% identified as dual-screeners. On the flip side, those aged 65 and older watched that debate on television at a rate of 98%.

    Of course, watching the debate isn’t the only way to interact. Posting about it on social media sites like Facebook and Twitter is also a big part of any national community event like a Presidential debate. Here’s what Pew has to say about that:

    “Only about a third of those who followed the debate in real time online – representing 5% of the overall debate audience– say they shared their own reactions to the debate online. This includes 8% of live debate watchers younger than 40 and 5% of those 40-to-65. No real-time debate watchers 65 and older reported sharing their reactions online while the debate was going.”

    When it comes to getting news about the debates (not watching them live), television still ruled (70% of the respondents). Online news grabbed 29% of people’s attention and social media sites attracted 22% of them. Over half of those surveyed under 40 got at least some debate news from and online/social media source.

    Despite this, YouTube says that the live stream of the first Presidential debate was one of their biggest live-streamed events ever. Do you go online for you live political events, or do you stick to the tube?

  • YouTube Has New Analytics Features

    YouTube Has New Analytics Features

    YouTube is talking about some new analytics features it has rolled out recently, including “time watched” and “annotation” reporting.

    The “Views” report has been enhanced to show more time watched data .”Estimated minutes watched” can be seen from the Views report. Users can also choose other data options from the “Compare metric” drop-down.

    YouTube Analytics Views

    The beta version of the Annotations report lets you view data on the performance of video annotations, with additional insights on viewer click and close rates.

    Annotations Report

    YouTube has also brought back Date Slider, which lets you adjust the date range and see how videos performed for various time periods.

    “You can average data across time with rolling totals for 7- and 30-day totals. Instead of seeing changes in weekend traffic and other cyclical data, rolling totals will smooth the trends to help you see overall growth without the distracting spikes and dips,” says YouTube product manager Ted Hamilton.

    Additionally, the metadata section for videos and channels now instantly provides data like lifetime views and video duration, the video hovercard shows a thumbnail of a video and basic info when hovering over a video link, and Compare Metrics gives users more ways to compare trends and patterns across different metrics.

  • Vice Presidential Debate Streaming Live on YouTube [Reminder]

    If you want to see the current Vice President of the United States and the man that could assume that role battle it out face-to-face, tonight’s your only chance.

    At 9 pm ET, Joe Biden and Paul Ryan will meet for the only Vice Presidential debate of the campaign season. The debate will take place at Centre College in Danville, Kentucky and will cover topics both domestic and foreign policy oriented. The debate is scheduled to run for an hour and a half.

    If you don’t have access to a television but do have internet access, you’re in luck. That’s because YouTube is continuing their live coverage of the big political events of the year with a live stream of tonight’s debate, starting at 9 pm.

    YouTube says that last week’s first Presidential debate was one of their biggest live-streamed events ever. YouTube streamed it through their new Elections Hub launched back in August. YouTube will also be streaming the final two Presidential debates later this month.

    Here are some top moments from past Vice Presidential debates:

    YouTube is not the only place to watch the debate live. Xbox LIVE members can also stream tonight’s contest on their consoles, and they can also interact by answering poll questions throughout the duration.

    Head on over to YouTube’s Politics and Elections Hub for more election-themed videos as you wait for the debate.

  • YouTube Adds To Its Original Programming

    YouTube has launched a bunch more of its original channels, extending to content from France, Germany, the UK, and more from the US.

    YouTube first announced the set of original channels about a year ago, starting with about 100 of them. A lot has happened since then, the company says. Its top 25 original channels are now averaging over a million views a week. 800 million users are watching 4 billion hours every month, YouTube says, adding that this is up from 3 billion hours earlier this year. The number of people subscribing has doubled year-over-year, and partners are reaching the 100k subscriber mark five times faster than they were two years ago, according to the company.

    “From local cuisine, health and wellness and parenting to sports, music, comedy, animation and news, this new lineup of original channels will have something for everyone,” says YouTube head of global content, Robert Kyncl. “They are backed by some of the biggest producers, well-known celebrities and emerging media companies from Europe and the U.S.”

    YouTube has a directory of the local channels here. There are six listings in automotive, ten in Beauty, 14 in Comedy, two in Dance, forty-one in entertainment, three in Film & Animation, twelve in Food, two in Gaming, twelve in Health, five in Hispanic, three in Home & Garden, one in How-To, twelve in Music, six in News, two in Pets & Animals, fourteen in Science & Technology, seventeen in Sports, three in Urban and four in Women’s Interests.

    Last week, AOL announced the launch of 22 new YouTube channels of its own. These are not included in YouTube’s “original channels” line-up.

  • YouTube Content ID Puts Manual Review Process Into The Hands Of Content Owners

    Earlier this week, the YouTube team laid out the changes it will be making to site’s controversial Content ID system. The proposed changes inspired hope that YouTube wouldn’t remove videos due to false positives in the content matching system. There was a small correction today that may change all that.

    In the original blog post, the YouTube team said that potential false positives would be manually reviewed by YouTube themselves before action is taken. It was a great idea that would cut down on videos like the Democratic National Convention being taken down over bogus copyright claims. Google corrected themselves the next day to say that content owners will be the ones in charge of the manual review process.

    So, the process is still the same, but the party conducting the review has changed. What’s the big deal? The problem lies in the fact that the manual review process won’t be conducted by a neutral third party. Some content curators aren’t exactly bastions of free speech and expression. We’ve seen them take down videos that were in the public domain before.

    The new appeals process and improvements to content matching are welcome additions to YouTube’s Content ID system, but they may have potentially removed the bite out of the manual review process. Leaving it up to the content owners could prove troublesome. Of course, the content owners will still have to file a DMCA takedown notice if the video creator appeals the decision after the manual reviews process. This puts more power into the hands of the creator to prove that their video doesn’t infringe any copyright.

    YouTube creators will still have to be wary of big media breathing down their necks. Even so, the changes may make it easier for smaller content creators to prove their videos are allowable under the DMCA. The video site has proven to be a fountain of creativity that remixes the familiar into the unfamiliar. Here’s hoping it stays that way.

    [h/t: Wired]

  • YouTube Upgrades Its Content ID System

    YouTube’s Content ID system has drawn the ire from plenty of Internet users. Important moments in history have been ruined thanks to the trigger happy ID matching program that seems to serve content curators over users. This year alone has seen two embarrassing instances of the Content ID system being abused – the Mars Rover landing and the Democratic National Convention. YouTube hopefully has a few fixes so stuff like this doesn’t happen again.

    YouTube says that a lot of the problems with the Content ID system comes from the fact that the system has over 500,000 hours of reference files to pull from. A video that even remotely matches the content that copyright owners have uploaded will be taken down with extreme prejudice. That’s a problem, and YouTube has introduced a new appeals process to make things easier.

    Those who have their videos blocked on copyright grounds will now be able to appeal the decision. The new appeals process takes the fight directly to the content owner with two options – rescind the claim or file an actual DMCA takedown request. YouTube’s Content ID system was abused so much in the past because there was no actual DMCA requests involved. Requiring trolls to actually file a request should help cut down on illegitimate takedowns.

    YouTube is also introducing a manual review process for claims. Those 500,000 hours of reference material can sometimes unintentionally cause a video to be blocked. The YouTube team has improved the algorithm used in this process, but they will also manually review videos that have been flagged. The video in question won’t be taken offline until it’s been manually reviewed.

    Finally, YouTube has improved the matching technology that sits at the center of the Content ID system. Better algorithms are one part of the solution, but they will continue to build out their reference library to make sure that videos uploaded to YouTube aren’t affected by bogus claims.

    It will be interesting to see if the Content ID system actually improves over the coming weeks. YouTube has to build back trust with a public that doesn’t necessarily trust its system or those who seemingly abuse it. In the meantime, here’s hoping a bogus claim from CNN or Fox News doesn’t take down the first presidential debate streaming live on YouTube tonight.

  • Seth MacFarlane is Your New Oscars Host and His Father is Unimpressed

    Ladies and Gentlemen, the 85th Oscars now officially have a host.

    The Academy has tapped Seth MacFarlane to helm the broadcast. It will be his first time hosting an event as large as the Oscars. Recently, MacFarlane MC’ed the Comedy Central Roast of Charlie Sheen.

    “We are thrilled to have Seth MacFarlane host the Oscars. His performing skills blend perfectly with our ideas for making the show entertaining and fresh,” said show producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron. “He will be the consummate host, and we are so happy to be working with him.”

    The Academy used YouTube to let internet users in the big news. Posted to the Oscars YouTube channel, here’s Seth MacFarlane breaking the news to the public, as well as his (severely unimpressed) father:

    “It’s truly an overwhelming privilege to be asked to host the Oscars,” said MacFarlane. “My thoughts upon hearing the news were, one, I will do my utmost to live up to the high standards set forth by my predecessors; and two, I hope they don’t find out I hosted the Charlie Sheen Roast.”

    MacFarlane, best known as the man behind Family Guy and American Dad, is riding high thanks to the box office success of his stoner comedy Ted. We’ll be interested to see if MacFarlane brings his often controversial brand of humor to the award ceremony, or dials it back a bit for the primetime crowd.

    The Oscars will air on Sunday, February 24th.

  • AOL Gets Into The YouTube Game, Launches 22 Channels

    AOL announced today that it will be offering its entire original video content library on YouTube, where it will be distributed, as well as monetized.

    The company says this includes nearly 20,000 videos from brands like The Huffington Post, TechCrunch and Moviefone.

    “With a series of key acquisitions in the online video space in recent years, AOL has become one of the dominant forces in the industry,” AOL said in its announcement. “In April, the company launched The AOL On Network, a platform of AOL’s complete video offerings and a curated video hub for consumers that offers premium, short-form video across 14 content channels. As of August, The AOL On Network attracts approximately 61 million unique visitors per month and is number one in categories including Autos, Business, Style, Home, Health, Food, Travel and Tech.”

    “The AOL brand includes an incredible array of premium video content from some of the most highly-trafficked sites on the web, and this deal provides us with a way to expose that content to a vast new audience,” said Ran Harnevo, SVP of Video at AOL. “AOL and YouTube are two of the biggest names in online video today, which makes this deal an important milestone, not just for us, but for the industry as a whole.”

    Ad sales will be handled by AOL’s sales team, and will provide a new revenue stream for the company.

    According to All Things D’s Peter Kafka, AOL’s YouTube channels are not part of YouTube’s so-called “new channels,” that see Google paying for limited exclusivity of content.

    AOL announced the channels at Advertising Week. There will be 22 of them, including: TechCrunch, HuffPost Live, Moviefone, AOL On Style and AOL On Home.

    AOL also announced the launch of Project Devil 2, the next phase of its branded display advertising product.

    Image: BBDO Digital Lab (YouTube).

  • Presidential Debates Streaming Live on YouTube [Reminder]

    Presidential Debates Streaming Live on YouTube [Reminder]

    Today, we begin the last full month before election day. And as we turn our calendars to October, the first Presidential debate is only a couple of days away.

    University of Denver will host the first debate of the season, and it will air across the country at 9 pm ET. Along with traditional broadcast channels, you can also watch the debate live on YouTube.

    Google will not only live stream this debate, but will also stream the other two Presidential debates on October 16th and 22nd, as well as the only Vice-Presidential debate on October 11th.

    “Throughout the month of October, President Barack Obama and Republican Presidential nominee Mitt Romney will go head-to-head in a series of highly-anticipated general election debates. This year, for the first time, you can watch the debates live and in full on the YouTube Elections Hub, via our partners at ABC News, who will be live streaming all four debates on the ABC News YouTube channel. No matter where you are in the world or how you’ll be accessing the internet, you’ll be able to watch the most important events of the 2012 election on YouTube” they said in a blog post.

    Everything is happening on YouTube’s Election Hub, which brought us the party conventions streaming live last month.

    YouTube launched the new Elections hub back in August as not only a place for live streaming events, but for election news coverage from a variety of partners, including ABC News, Al Jazeera, BuzzFeed, Larry King, the New York Times, Univision, and the Wall Street Journal.

  • Google Caves, Will Block Contested YouTube Video in Brazil

    After running out of appeal options, Google’s Director in Brazil Fabio Coelho has announced that Google will in fact block access to certain disputed videos in the country.

    Coelho had a pretty personal stake in the drama that played out over the last few days. Earlier this week, a Brazilian judge ordered his arrest after Google failed to removed the videos, which the court claimed defamed a local mayoral candidate dring election season. Originally, Google held that they were not responsible for the content of the videos posted to YouTube, saying:

    “Google is appealing the court’s decision to remove a video from YouTube because, as a platform, we are not responsible for the content uploaded to our site.”

    But those appeals hit a roadblock, and Google has decided to block the “offending” videos.

    Coelho has posted a lengthy statement on the decision, in which he speaks regretfully on the decision.

    “Late last night, we learned that our final legal appeal has been denied and so now we have no choice but to block the video in Brazil. We are deeply disappointed that we have never had the full opportunity to argue in court that these were legitimate free speech videos and should remain available in Brazil,” he says.

    Here’s the full statement:

    You may have read articles in the press over the last couple of weeks about YouTube videos in Brazil. Given all the interest, we wanted to explain what has happened, and why. First of all some basic principles about the service. Our goal is for YouTube to be a community that everyone can enjoy, as well as a platform for free speech around the world. This can cause real challenges, because what is OK in one country may be offensive or even illegal in another.

    So we have clear community guidelines about the kind of videos that are unacceptable–and when they are flagged, we review and if necessary remove them. If a video is illegal in a particular country–and we have a local version of the service there, as in Brazil–we will restrict access to it, after receiving a valid court order or government complaint. Because we are deeply committed to free expression, we often push back on requests that we do not believe are valid. For example, we were recently in court in the US arguing that videos were perfectly legitimate and should stay on YouTube.

    Now for what’s happened in Brazil. As usual during an election season, we have had a lot of court orders to remove videos that are critical of political candidates. As always, we have reviewed them all– and pushed back on the many legal complaints that we believe are invalid. For example, last week, we appealed a court order to remove videos from YouTube. While we were waiting for that appeal to be heard, an arrest warrant was issued for me as country director of Google Brazil.

    Late last night, we learned that our final legal appeal has been denied and so now we have no choice but to block the video in Brazil. We are deeply disappointed that we have never had the full opportunity to argue in court that these were legitimate free speech videos and should remain available in Brazil.

    Despite all this, we will continue to campaign for free expression globally—not just because it’s a key tenet of free societies, but also because more information generally means more choice, more power, more economic opportunity and more freedom for people. As Article 19 of the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights states, “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

    Ironically, the user who published one of the videos has now removed it and closed their account– showing just what a chilling effect these episodes can have on free speech.

    Sadly, I guess we have to score one for censorship. Bad on you, Brazil.

  • Google Lets You Watch Movie Trailers From SERPs

    Google announced via Google+ update today that it has added a “Trailer” button for movie search results, which let you watch a trailer from YouTube without having to leave the search results.

    Here’s the post:

    Google

    Finding the perfect movie for your next excursion to the theater just got easier, thanks to an improvement that enables you to watch trailers directly from the search results page. For example, if you want to check out all of the movies available in your area, you can search [showtimes nyc] on google.com in English, click the Trailer button next to a listed movie, and the official trailer on YouTube will pop up. If that movie's not your cup of tea, you can click the X in the right-hand corner and watch the other trailers available. The Trailer button is also available if you're searching for a specific movie—say, [finding nemo 3d]. 

    #searchtips#googlesearch

    When you click the button, it blacks out the screen and serves you a YouTube video with a movie description. The look is very similar to when you look at a photo on Google+:

    Movie Trailer from Google Results

    This is just the latest example of Google finding more ways to keep you on Google, without having to send you to a third party site (although in this case, Google also owns the third party).

  • Osamu Tezuka Fans Rejoice: Astro Boy Is Now On YouTube

    Osamu Tezuka is a name that should be familiar to most, if not all, fans of Japanese animation and comics. He spearheaded the expressive big eye style that the genre uses to this day. He also created numerous manga that continue to be some of the best works in the medium. Unfortunately, a lot of the older anime based on his manga remains hard to obtain. Good thing the Internet is around to save the day.

    In a blog post today, YouTube points out that Viki, a collaborative subtitle group, has created a YouTube channel dedicated to Tezuka’s anime works. All the episodes are in the original Japanese with subtitles in languages ranging from English to Arabic. There will be more subtitles added as more translators finish up scripts in their respective languages.

    For now, you can check out the 1980s Astro Boy series in all its glory. If you haven’t seen it yet, you should really check it out. It’s a good one:

    Alongside Astro Boy, Viki’s channel has fully translated seasons of Black Jack, Dear Brother, Don Dracula, Kimba the White Lion, and Marvelous Melmo. YouTube adds that there are more titles coming your way soon.

    The addition of classic anime to YouTube only serves to help the service expand its offerings to compete with more dedicated streaming services. Crunchyroll has had the anime streaming market cornered for some time now, but they lack a lot of classic titles. Getting Tezuka anime up on YouTube definitely sets the platform apart from the crowd.

    If Astro Boy is not enough to kill any productivity you had going today, check out Kimba the White Lion. If you liked The Lion King, you’ll love this:

  • Google Lets You Download All Your YouTube Videos Together

    Google has just made it a hell of a lot easier to get all of your videos off of YouTube, should you choose to do so.

    In the past, users have been able to download individual videos using the Video Manager, but now Google is letting you grab your whole collection at once with Google Takeout.

    Google Takeout was launched in 2011 as an offering from Google’s Data Liberation Front. Basically, it allows you to grab your data out of multiple Google products, in case you want to switch to another service, or simply don’t want to use those products any longer.

    Google will only let you take out your original videos from YouTube. Don’t expect to be able to do this with all of your favorites, playlists, etc.

    “With Google Takeout, you can download all of the original videos that you have uploaded in a few simple clicks,” says YouTube engineer Brian Hawkins. “No transcoding or transformation — you’ll get exactly the same videos that you first uploaded. Your videos in. Your videos out.”

  • Google’s President of Operations Arrested in Brazil over YouTube Spat, According to Reports [UPDATED]

    UPDATE: Google has not commented on Coelho, but a spokesperson told me that they are taking action on the ruling to remove the aforementioned videos:

    “Google is appealing the court’s decision to remove a video from YouTube because, as a platform, we are not responsible for the content uploaded to our site.”

    ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Well, that didn’t take long. Less than two days after a Brazilian Judge ordered the arrest of Google’s President of Operations in the country, he has been arrested.

    Fabio Jose Silva Coelho was arrested on Wednesday, according to a statement released by the Federal Police (obtained by Brazilian news site G1). The site reports that he will not stay incarcerated, and will be release later considering he agrees to obey a subpoena.

    Coelho was arrested on charges that Google failed to remove certain YouTube videos that were determined to be defamatory. These videos contained disparaging remarks about a mayoral candidate in the city of Campo Grande. According to G1, the candidate Alcides Bernal calls the videos lies, and said they are part of an “electioneering strategy” designed to undermine his campaign.

    Brazil and Google have clashed before on the issue of “offensive content,” as Google was sued in country for content hosted on Google’s Orkut social networking site.

    Google has stated that they are not responsible for any offensive content. Google has complied with takedown requests in the past, however. In fact, Brazil submitted 418 separate takedown requests last year alone, and Google says that they complied with just over 60% of them.

    We’ve reached out to Google and will update this article when we hear back.

    [G1 via The Next Web]

  • Brazil Judge Orders Arrest of Google President of Operations over Video Removal Request

    In another international case of countries attempting to hold companies responsible for “offensive” content hosted by one of their sites, a Brazilian judge has actually ordered the arrest of one Google employee.

    On Monday, Judge Flavio Peren ordered the arrest of Google’s President of Operations in the country, Fabio Jose Silva Coelho. The order came after the failure of Google to remove a couple of YouTube videos that contained “disparaging remarks” about a mayoral candidate in the city of Campo Grande. Although the arrest order has been given, police say they’ve yet to receive any such orders, according to the Washington Post.

    This isn’t the first time that Google has been involved in content removal disputes in Brazil, with some previous scuffles involving Google-owned Orkut. Earlier this year, Google was sued over “offensive content” posted by users on the older social networking site.

    “Government requests for content removal are high in Brazil relative to other countries partly because of the popularity of our social networking website, orkut,” says Google in their 2011 Transparency Report.

    Last year, Google received 418 separate content removal request from the Brazilian government which covered 1,246 individual items. Google says that they fully or partially complied with just over 60% of those requests. The number of YouTube videos that Brazil requested removal due to “defamation” was 217.

    Google has said that they won’t appeal the ruling, as they aren’t responsible for the defamatory content.

  • YouTube Adds New Voter Registration Annotation to Make Voting Go Viral

    Today marks the debut of a new holiday in the United States. September 25th is officially the first-ever National Vote Registration Day, a campaign to make sure that all eligible voters out there get registered. The campaign is spreading the word across Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Google+, and other networks using the official hashtag #925NVRD.

    YouTube is taking a small step to help with the national voter registration drive, in the hopes that they can “make voting go viral.”

    Today, they’re announcing a new Voter Registration annotation that video creators can add to their videos. It will work like any other annotation, except it will link to Google’s dedicated voter registration hub.

    Here’s how you add the new voter annotation to your existing videos:

    You can add this annotation to a video in a few easy steps:

    Go to Edit Video on any of your uploads; At the top of the page, you’ll see a tab marked Annotation (fourth tab); Click “Add Annotation” and select “Cause” at the bottom of the list; Under “Select a Cause” choose “Register to Vote”; Choose the times you want it to appear and click “Save.”

    “In 2008, 6 million Americans didn’t vote because they missed a registration deadline or didn’t know how to register. In 2012, we want to make sure no one is left out,” says the NVRD site. Moderately to severely viral videos have the chance to reach hundreds or thousands – even millions of pairs of eyes from now until election day. If only a handful of those people click on an annotation in the video and choose to register to vote, that’s a win.