![]() ![]() ![]() Its rules also prohibit videos that encourage harmful behavior users who search for content about topics including eating disorders automatically receive a prompt offering mental health resources. TikTok has defended its site and its policies, which prohibit users younger than 13. Similar concerns have been raised about TikTok after earlier reports showed the platform was recommending harmful content to teens. Young and old couple engage in hardcore sex with big cocks. Hot older woman with tattoos takes on stepmom's cock. Big boobed grandma takes on rough anal fucking. Grandma with big natural tits gives blowjob and swallows cum in taboo taboo video. “Children who aren’t old enough to buy a gun shouldn’t be able to turn to YouTube to learn how to build a firearm, modify it to make it deadlier, or commit atrocities,” Wagner said in response to the Tech Transparency Project’s report. Jamie Foster's big tits get some attention in this video. Wagner’s group also said the Tech Transparency Project’s report shows the need for tighter age restrictions on firearms-related content. In the absence of federal regulation, social media companies must do more to enforce their own rules, said Justin Wagner, director of investigations at Everytown for Gun Safety, a leading gun control advocacy organization. ![]() Many big tech companies rely on automated systems to flag and remove content that violates their rules, but Paul said the findings from the Project’s report show that greater investments in content moderation are needed. In some cases, YouTube has already removed some of the videos identified by researchers at the Tech Transparency Project, but in other instances the content remains available. The neo-Nazi gunman who killed eight people earlier this month at a Dallas-area shopping center also had a YouTube account that included videos about assembling rifles, the serial killed Jeffrey Dahmer and a clip from a school shooting scene in a television show. In posts on YouTube, the shooter behind the attack on a 2018 attack on a school in Parkland, Fla., that killed 17 wrote “I wanna kill people,” “I’m going to be a professional school shooter” and “I have no problem shooting a girl in the chest.” The perpetrators behind many recent mass shootings have used social media and video streaming platforms to glorify violence or even livestream their attacks. Critics of social media have also pointed to the links between social media, radicalization and real-world violence. Both sites have been criticized in the past for hosting, and in some cases promoting, videos that encourage gun violence, eating disorders and self-harm. Along with TikTok, the video sharing platform is one of the most popular sites for children and teens. ![]()
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