Mora-Blanco won’t describe what she saw that morning. That day Mora-Blanco came across something that stopped her in her tracks But that day Mora-Blanco came across something that stopped her in her tracks. After watching a couple seconds apiece, SQUAD members clicked one of four buttons that appeared in the upper right hand corner of their screens: "Approve" - let the video stand "Racy" - mark video as 18-plus "Reject" - remove video without penalty "Strike" - remove video with a penalty to the account. Videos arrived on their screens in a never-ending queue. They talked and made jokes, trying to make sense of the rules. Most of them were friends, friends of friends, or family. Mora-Blanco recalls her teammates were a "mish-mash" of men and women gay and straight slightly tipped toward white, but also Indian, African-American, and Filipino. On the table before them was a single piece of paper, folded in half to show a bullet-point list of instructions: Remove videos of animal abuse.
Mora-Blanco sat next to Misty Ewing-Davis, who, having been on the job a few months, counted as an old hand. Their job? To protect YouTube’s fledgling brand by scrubbing the site of offensive or malicious content that had been flagged by users, or, as Mora-Blanco puts it, "to keep us from becoming a shock site." The founders wanted YouTube to be something new, something better - "a place for everyone" - and not another eBaum’s World, which had already become a repository for explicit pornography and gratuitous violence. They worked in teams of four to six, some doing day shifts and some night, reviewing videos around the clock. Mora-Blanco’s team - 10 people in total - was dubbed The SQUAD (Safety, Quality, and User Advocacy Department). Mora-Blanco was one of 60-odd twenty-somethings who’d come to work at the still-unprofitable website. It was a warm, sunny morning, and she was sitting at her desk in the company’s office, located above a pizza shop in San Mateo, an idyllic and affluent suburb of San Francisco. This article was reported in partnership with The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute Maybe, she figured, she could pull in enough money to pursue her lifelong dream: to become a hair stylist.
Struggling to make rent and working a post-production job at Current TV, she’d jumped at the chance to work at an internet startup called YouTube.
#GAY PORN BLACK GUYS SUCKING WHITE DICK FREE#
A recent grad of California State University, Chico, Mora-Blanco had majored in art, minored in women’s studies, and spent much of her free time making sculptures from found objects and blown-glass. When using a search engine such as Google, Bing or Yahoo check the safe search settings where you can exclude adult content sites from your search results Īsk your internet service provider if they offer additional filters īe responsible, know what your children are doing online.Julie Mora-Blanco remembers the day, in the summer of 2006, when the reality of her new job sunk in. Use family filters of your operating systems and/or browsers Other steps you can take to protect your children are:
More information about the RTA Label and compatible services can be found here. Parental tools that are compatible with the RTA label will block access to this site.
We use the "Restricted To Adults" (RTA) website label to better enable parental filtering. Protect your children from adult content and block access to this site by using parental controls. PARENTS, PLEASE BE ADVISED: If you are a parent, it is your responsibility to keep any age-restricted content from being displayed to your children or wards. Furthermore, you represent and warrant that you will not allow any minor access to this site or services. This website should only be accessed if you are at least 18 years old or of legal age to view such material in your local jurisdiction, whichever is greater. You are about to enter a website that contains explicit material (pornography).