QAnon is The Eyes Of A Drunk Female Employee Are Eroticrunning out of major online platforms where it can spread its conspiracies.
In a statement to NPR, the viral video app TikTok has confirmed that it bans accounts spreading QAnon disinformation.
QAnon is a far right conspiracy theory based on the unfounded belief that President Donald Trump is secretly battling a satanic global child-trafficking ring run by the Democrats and liberal Hollywood elites.
"Content and accounts that promote QAnon violate our disinformation policy and we remove them from our platform," a TikTok spokesperson said in a statement to Mashable. "We've also taken significant steps to make this content harder to find across search and hashtags by redirecting associated terms to our Community Guidelines."
TikTok had already updatedits policies over the past few months in order to limit the spread of disinformation on the platform. The company began to impose stricter policies on what was allowed, specifically when it came to election and coronavirus-related misinformation. Those rule changes came about as the company struggledwith its own battle in the United States, as the Trump administration sought to ban the app over its connections to its Chinese parent company, ByteDance.
As TikTok mentioned in its statement, the account ban policy isn't the first action the company has taken against QAnon. The company previously cracked down on the conspiracy theory by blocking hashtag trends and searches mentioning QAnon or related conspiracies, such as Pizzagate.
By blocking these hashtags, TikTok severely limited the ability to find QAnon content. However, there were workarounds, such as alternative spellings or new hashtags associated with the conspiracy.
"We continually update our safeguards with misspellings and new phrases as we work to keep TikTok a safe and authentic place for our community," TikTok's spokesperson told me.
Earlier this month, Facebook prohibitedPages and Groups that promote QAnon. YouTube also followed suit in banningcertain types of “harmful” QAnon and other conspiratorial content.
Topics Social Media TikTok
Previous:The Man Who Knew Nothing at All
4 incredibly backward, WTF quotes from Trump's attorney general nominee'Avengers: Endgame' is all about the snap. But why did Thanos snap?Boy who wrote touching letter to child war victim melts our hearts againDonald Trump writes misleading tweet, but that's not the scary partFake news has gotten so bad Obama had to weigh inTwitter emoji denial has Trump fundraiser fumingDesigner Sophie Theallet says she won't dress Melania Trump'Game of Thrones' fans react to the episode's most surprising deathEverything coming to (and going from) Hulu in May 2019What's coming to Amazon Prime Video in May 2019Cyclone Kenneth is about to pummel MozambiqueElon Musk is annoying the hell out of people who work with selfMicrosoft realizes password expiration is poor securityMike Pence tries to end the 'Hamilton' drama while Trump stokes the flamesMadeleine Albright to millennial voters: Where were you?The next frontier in wearables is helping couples conceiveUber could be worth $90 billion. Most drivers won't see much of it.Sigourney Weaver surprised the high schoolers behind that 'Alien' play'Game of Thrones' Weekly: The big conversations heading into episode 3Leonardo DiCaprio visited a Scottish cafe and nobody could cope Too Many Books! We‘re in an Era of Overproduction On Elvis and Teddy Bears Strand's Last Interview, Joyce's Favorite Escape, and More Wordsworth’s Most Famous Poem Turns 200 “Mating” Book Club, Part 5: The Joys of Intellectual Love Can You Spot the Fake Books at Shakespeare and Company? Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and the Sexual Anxiety of the Lost Generation Farewell to Meat: At Masopust, the Czech Festival of Spring When Children Meet Eugene Ionesco Staff Picks: Bernard Berenson, Olivia Laing, Timothy Denevi When Eudora Welty Went Sailing with Faulkner Macaroon vs. Macaron: Cookie Summit 2015 Listen: An Archival Interview with Reynolds Price “And I Was Like...” Exaggeration in Storytelling Remembering St. Nicholas Magazine for Children On the Pleasures of Escaping Yourself Eavesdropping in the City The Paris Review of the Air—and Land, and Sea Manet to Monet: Don’t Let Renoir Paint Leavening Agent—Or Ticking Time
2.5135s , 8199.125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Eyes Of A Drunk Female Employee Are Erotic】,Information Information Network