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Giuliani: Kim Jong-un 'begged' for summit to take place

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Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani has said North Korea's leader "begged" for their summit to be rescheduled after the US president cancelled it. Speaking at a conference in Israel, Mr Giuliani said Mr Trump's tough stance had forced Pyongyang's hand. Mr Trump called off the summit in May, accusing North Korea of "tremendous anger and open hostility". But plans for the 12 June bilateral in Singapore were revived after a conciliatory response from Pyongyang. Mr Giuliani was speaking at an investment conference in Israel when he made the remark. The Wall Street Journal first reported that Mr Giuliani said: "Well, Kim Jong-un got back on his hands and knees and begged for it, which is exactly the position you want to put him in." Trump-Kim to meet on Sentosa island What not to say to North Korea Dennis Rodman: The Trump-Kim matchmaker? How Kim the outcast became popular Mr Giuliani is an attorney for the president tackling the Russia collusio

YouTube apologizes for blocking LGBT videos

YouTube apologizes for blocking LGBT videos

Many vloggers remain unimpressed with how YouTube classifies "sensitive content" under its Restricted Mode.
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YouTube boasts a strong and significant LGBTQ community.







YouTube apologized on Monday for upsetting its community by blocking and filtering videos made by its LGBTQ+ community.
But the apology was met with a lukewarm response.
The problem occurred with YouTube's "Restricted Mode", a feature designed to "use community flagging, age-restrictions, and other signals to identify and filter out potentially inappropriate content."
Restricted mode is supposed to protect users who don't want to see mature content, but has also been filtering out videos that don't contain mature content.
"LGBTQ+ videos are available in Restricted Mode, but videos that discuss more sensitive issues may not be," said YouTube in a statement. "We regret any confusion this has caused and are looking into your concerns."


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Replies to YouTube's statement on Twitter suggested that many high-profile vloggers, including Jenna Marbles and Thomas Sanders, are not satisfied with the platform's response. At the time of publishing, many YouTubers are still reporting their videos that include discussions about terminology or their coming out stories as being blocked.
"You blocked my coming out video that addresses labels we face daily, a video MADE for LGBTQ youth -- nothing is sensitive," tweeted vlogger Jordan Doww.

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