Days after Facebook and Twitter shut down hundreds of allegedly Chinese-linked accounts, YouTube follows suit. {"preview_thumbnail":"https://cdn.flowplayer.com/6684a05f-6468-4ecd-87d5-a748773282a3/i/v-i-3…","video_id":"326b6659-f8ec-4c7b-9e93-80a0e11adda5","player_id":"8ca46225-42a2-4245-9c20-7850ae937431","provider":"flowplayer","video":"World’s 10 Most Valuable Football Teams 2019"} On Thursday, YouTube, a Google-owned video sharing platform, disabled 210 channels on the platform after discovering that the channels "behaved in a coordinated manner while uploading videos related to the ongoing protests in Hong Kong," according to a blog post by Shane Huntley, a member of Google's security ...
      
            
      
     
     
                   
  