You must be logged into YouTube to report an item, but if you have any Google account (such as gmail) you will already have a valid login due to their unified services.
* YouTube channels are reported in the same manner as users.
Step 1
- Go to the user’s YouTube page
You must be logged into YouTube to report an item, but if you have any Google account (such as gmail) you will already have a valid login due to their unified services.
Step 1
- Click the More button underneath the video
Whilst comments normally only display options to Like or Reply, hovering the mouse cursor over a comment will display a cross and tooltip which allows you to hide it and then report it.
Comments must be hidden before they can be reported!
Step 1
- Hover the mouse cursor over the comment to show a cross in the top right corner.
- Click the cross to hide the comment.
Facebook’s post reporting depends on the content of the post in question. If the post comes directly from a person, is shared from another source, or includes a photo, the reporting options may vary.
Step 1
- When viewing a post on a Facebook timeline, move the cursor over the post to reveal a chevron (v shape) at the top right of the post.
- Click the chevron to reveal the post options, then click I don’t like this post…
Facebook pages are currently one of the few entities on the social media site which have a relatively intuitive and straightforward reporting interface.
Step 1
- Click the ellipsis to the right of the Message button to drop down the page interaction menu, then click Report Page.
Depending on how you are viewing an image on Facebook, the reporting button may or may not be initially visible or accessible. Whilst the report button varies by interface however, the reporting process itself is subsequently consistent.
Source : The Telegraph
American rapper Lil B has been temporarily banned from Facebook after the social network ruled he violated its hate speech policies.
The 28-year-old received a 30-day ban from the social media platform after a post about white people and gun violence.
Source: UsNews.com
CROFTON, Md. (AP) — A man who pleaded guilty to committing a hate crime by hanging a noose outside a middle school has delivered a public apology, saying he didn’t mean to scare or discriminate against anyone because of their race.
Nineteen-year-old Conner Prout stood before roughly 60 people at a meeting of the Caucus of African-American Leaders on Tuesday and apologized for his role in a stunt that sent Crofton Middle School students running to the guidance counselor’s office in tears, the Capital reports.