Facebook, YouTube and Twitter go to extraordinary lengths to take down mosque massacre videos
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In the hours after a shooting suspect in New Zealand broadcast his mosque rampage across social media, internet companies worked quickly to remove versions of the video that continued to pop up on their platforms.
Facebook said Saturday it removed 1.5 million videos of the attack in the first 24 hours after it was originally livestreamed.
Facebook said 1.2 million of those videos "were blocked at upload." Facebook did not immediately respond to CNBC's inquiry about the number of people who viewed the videos of the attack prior to their removal.The YouTube spokesperson said the company suspended the ability to sort searches by upload date as it tried to remove videos of the attack to make it more difficult to find the violent videos, though it's unclear how quickly this step was taken.Original article
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