Posted on 08/24/2022 6:01:43 AM PDT by Salman
Google made an oops.
After suddenly pulling the plug on dozens of Cook County courtroom feeds on YouTube last week, the tech giant reversed course on Tuesday, saying, “sometimes we make mistakes.”
Most of the court system’s feed pages were restored by Tuesday evening.
“Last Friday, Google disabled the accounts due to unspecified violations of unspecified YouTube Community Guidelines,” the office of Chief Judge Timothy Evans said in a statement Tuesday afternoon. “Earlier today, [we] received a notice from Google’s YouTube team confirming that the court’s channels do not violate the guidelines and acknowledging that ‘sometimes we make mistakes.'”
Evans launched YouTube access in the early days of the COVID pandemic to provide transparency and access while courtrooms were closed. Since then, the feeds, particularly the daily bail hearings for people newly accused of crimes, have grown in popularity and importance.
With YouTube, family and friends can monitor bail hearings for loved ones from home and then make plans to win their release before traveling to the courthouse and county jail complex in Little Village. Until the feeds were introduced in early 2020, concerned parties had to travel to court, where cellphones are banned, and sit through sometimes hours-long hearings to get the same information.
On the one hand, Google's nonsensical standards. On the other hand, don't cross the mob.
So which cases were in the courts last week that they didn’t want people to see?
KafkaTube
“Sometimes we get our pants pulled down and our asses paddled while everyone watches.”
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