TheOneTrueRobb
Registered User
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2022
- Messages
- 89
What's in San Bruno? Why, YouTube HQ. Why am I mentioning that fine organization, in that fine city?
Well, as some of of you may have noticed, I'm on a tear trying to convince scene-watchers to report Frauditor videos. One point I make is that YouTube's reporting system is the only way for us to convey our disgust with YouTube's financial support of the Frauditor crime wave, through monetization and through their tolerance of clearly detrimental behavior by these thugs.
But is it?
I'm just putting this out there to get a feel for any support it might have. My proposal? That we get as many people as possible down to 901 Cherry Ave. in San Bruno, and demand an answer from YouTube. The question?
Why. Why do you pay Frauditors to abuse and harass Govt. Workers, Postal Employees, LEOs, Private Businesses, Medical facilities - all the typical Frauditor targets. We've been reporting these videos now for at least a year, and we still have no answer.
Well, we need to demand that they answer. We need to demand that they answer for this situation, a situation that they could've quashed years ago, but instead decided to just collect the AdSense revenue and wash their hands of it. And just now, this Saturday afternoon, May 20, 2023, some innocent worker is getting a camera shoved in their face, and now has to deal with some rude, foul-smelling unemployable malcontent whose entire purpose is to piss them off for Clicks and Views.
I'm thinking early to mid September, the 9th or the 16th.
I'm still going to urge right-minded people to report these videos, and I'm still going to bug commentators to include links to the original videos they cover. But it seems to me that an image of YouTube HQ surrounded by pissed off viewers, Frauditor victims, perhaps even some stars of the anti-frauditor scene, might light a fire under this clueless company, maybe pull their heads out of whatever sand they might be currently stuck in.
Interested in any thoughts you might have. Is this worth pursuing?
Well, as some of of you may have noticed, I'm on a tear trying to convince scene-watchers to report Frauditor videos. One point I make is that YouTube's reporting system is the only way for us to convey our disgust with YouTube's financial support of the Frauditor crime wave, through monetization and through their tolerance of clearly detrimental behavior by these thugs.
But is it?
I'm just putting this out there to get a feel for any support it might have. My proposal? That we get as many people as possible down to 901 Cherry Ave. in San Bruno, and demand an answer from YouTube. The question?
Why. Why do you pay Frauditors to abuse and harass Govt. Workers, Postal Employees, LEOs, Private Businesses, Medical facilities - all the typical Frauditor targets. We've been reporting these videos now for at least a year, and we still have no answer.
Well, we need to demand that they answer. We need to demand that they answer for this situation, a situation that they could've quashed years ago, but instead decided to just collect the AdSense revenue and wash their hands of it. And just now, this Saturday afternoon, May 20, 2023, some innocent worker is getting a camera shoved in their face, and now has to deal with some rude, foul-smelling unemployable malcontent whose entire purpose is to piss them off for Clicks and Views.
I'm thinking early to mid September, the 9th or the 16th.
I'm still going to urge right-minded people to report these videos, and I'm still going to bug commentators to include links to the original videos they cover. But it seems to me that an image of YouTube HQ surrounded by pissed off viewers, Frauditor victims, perhaps even some stars of the anti-frauditor scene, might light a fire under this clueless company, maybe pull their heads out of whatever sand they might be currently stuck in.
Interested in any thoughts you might have. Is this worth pursuing?