
The emergence of internet videos showing American troops being attacked by Iraqi insurgents on mainstream video sites like YouTube.com and Goggle video poses new challenges to the Bush administration as it continues its "democratization" of
The New York Times report on the spread of online attack videos disturbingly indicates that companies have sided with censorship. Reporter Wyatt writes that YouTube.com removed many of the video snippets reviewed by the NYT, and others of attacks in
If YouTube's mission is to help people share original videos and let them "see first-hand accounts of current events" then these videos surely seem to fall inline with what the company's about. Why shouldn't the public be allowed to see what's really happening? Who knows, maybe someone (the USG?) will want to post videos about the schools being built or the oil being pumbped. Will these be removed too? I somehow doubt it.