A collection of the day’s news coverage of YouTube.
- NYC cop seen in YouTube shove no longer with NYPD
- Drugs man caught by YouTube video
- CCTV launches online TV station
- Students Face Suspension After YouTube Fight Videos Surface
- GOP leaders seek donations for Coleman via YouTube
- YouTube looks out for content owners, disables video ripping
- FEMA Uses YouTube For Disaster Outreach
- Terms of Enslavement: Web Sites’ Outrageous Service Agreements
“New York City police say an officer seen in a YouTube video knocking a bicyclist to the pavement during a protest has been kicked off the force, although his lawyer says his client resigned.”
“A 25-year-old man was arrested after he posted videos on the YouTube website of a cannabis plant he was growing.
“China’s state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) is setting up a nationwide online TV station as part of its efforts to boost its Web activities, maintain state control of the media and compete with the growing popularity of YouTube-style video portals.”
“A number of middle school students in Green Bay are facing suspensions and fines after posting their fights on the YouTube Web site.”
“A dozen Republican heavyweights debuted on YouTube this week, pleading for donations to help Norm Coleman pay his legal bills in his fight to regain Minnesota’s U.S. Senate race.”
“The Google-owned site has been making changes to its code recently to lock out third-party download tools.”
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