Google employees charged over videos posted online - wtf

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Crazy decision by the Italians here - http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010...ficial+Google+Blog)&utm_content=Google+Reader

In late 2006, students at a school in Turin, Italy filmed and then uploaded a video to Google Video that showed them bullying an autistic schoolmate. The video was totally reprehensible and we took it down within hours of being notified by the Italian police. We also worked with the local police to help identify the person responsible for uploading it and she was subsequently sentenced to 10 months community service by a court in Turin, as were several other classmates who were also involved. In these rare but unpleasant cases, that's where our involvement would normally end.

But in this instance, a public prosecutor in Milan decided to indict four Google employees —David Drummond, Arvind Desikan, Peter Fleischer and George Reyes (who left the company in 2008). The charges brought against them were criminal defamation and a failure to comply with the Italian privacy code. To be clear, none of the four Googlers charged had anything to do with this video. They did not appear in it, film it, upload it or review it. None of them know the people involved or were even aware of the video's existence until after it was removed.

Nevertheless, a judge in Milan today convicted 3 of the 4 defendants — David Drummond, Peter Fleischer and George Reyes — for failure to comply with the Italian privacy code. All 4 were found not guilty of criminal defamation. In essence this ruling means that employees of hosting platforms like Google Video are criminally responsible for content that users upload.

Google employees are being charged for uploading some videos, which are disgusting, but they have nothing to do with them. They seem to be blaming the platform they are hosted on!

Weird?!
 
If you provide a medium that allows people to post offensive videos, you really can't complain if someone does so and you get to carry the can - silly googlers.

That is easy to say but going by wiki, 20 hours of video are uploaded each minute, which is far more than can be humanly checked. Surely if they put warnings in place to say that offensive material is not allowed and they do remove it within hours, should they be blamed?
 
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