MSM links fake & gay "Frazzledrip" video to Qanon/QResearch
On April 15, 2018, many anons began to hear online rumors about a video on the dark web called "Frazzledrop" involving HRC and Huma engaged in horrible Satanic acts. All anons commenting on this video expressed their sincere hope that this video was fake, not real. No one could verify. One intrepid anon even went on the dark web to check it out but could not find any trace of Frazzledrip (>1050932 pb). Subsequent comments talked about the possible purpose of starting the Frazzledrip rumor; anons wondered whether it might a setup that would be used in the future for a DS psyop of some kind.
It seems that the future in now. And we are the target. In the article below, Qanon is mentioned SIX TIMES. The intent? Probably to pair Q with the idea of crazy conspiracy theories. Mentioning Frazzledrip obviously drives the point home.
Too bad there's no evidence. Searching on "frazzledrip" in QResearch database yields comments by anons asking first whether it's real (answer=no) then what its purpose is. Well, now we know: to discredit groups like ours (www.resignation.info/scripts/8chan/search.php). [SEE screenshot]
YouTube’s conspiracy theory crisis, explained
JANE COASTON DECEMBER 14, 2018
VOX
https://www.vox.com/technology/2018/12/12/18136132/google-youtube-congress-conspiracy-theories
Google CEO Sundar Pichai testifying before lawmakers in Washington on December 11, 2018.
The three-and-a-half-hour hearing with Google CEO Sundar Pichai and the House Judiciary Committee wasn’t exactly a showcase of deep knowledge of technology. One Republican representative complained that all the Google results for the Obamacare repeal act and the Republican tax bill were negative. Rep. Steve King (R-IA) had to be told that Google does not make the iPhone. Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) demanded that Google be held liable for Wikipedia’s “political bias.”
But one lawmaker, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD), raised an actually important and pressing issue: the way YouTube’s algorithms can be used to push conspiracy theories.
“The point at which it becomes a matter of serious public interest is when your communication vehicle is being used to promote propaganda that leads to violent events,” he said. He was alluding to the Pizzagate conspiracy theory that led to an armed gunman showing up at a DC-area pizzeria in 2016 — a conspiracy theory spread, in part, on YouTube.
Raskin asked about another especially strange conspiracy theory that emerged on YouTube — “Frazzledrip,” which has deep ties to the QAnon and Pizzagate conspiracy theories. He asked Pichai, “Is your basic position that [Frazzledrip] is something you want to try to do something about, but basically there is just an avalanche of such material and there’s really nothing that can be done, and it should be buyer beware or consumer beware when you go on YouTube?” He added, “Are you taking the threats seriously?
Raskin’s questions were getting at an important issue: YouTube, which Google purchased for $1.65 billion 12 years ago, has a conspiracy theory problem. It’s baked into the way the service works. And it appears that neither Congress nor YouTube is anywhere near solving it….. [SEE screenshot for moar]
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Moar:
*'New YT videos: there are several; try eg Pizzagate and "Frazzledrip" Make It to Congress https://''www.youtube.com/watch?v=upKkcK4Xzao&t=837s
*Business Insider also picked up on the story [see screenshot]: https://www.businessinsider.com/sundar-pichai-google-ceo-pressed-on-youtube-frazzledrip-conspiracy-2018-12
*Question:
The Frazzledrip video doesn't even exist, as far as we know. So what possessed Rep. Jamie Rankin to ask about it when questionning Pichai during the Congressional hearings? (DIGG, anyone???)