3D-gun pioneer Cody Wilson said that YouTube had removed the fundraising video and press conference, featuring the New York Times and Associated Press reporters, the Washington Free Beacon says. "They're saying it's ‘promotion of the sale of firearms.' They removed every video I've ever made on ghost gunner and Defcad," – Wilson told the newspaper.
READ MORE: ‘The iTunes of 3D Guns’: Printable Gun Maker Selling Plans Despite Court Ban
"It's self-evidently an attempt at controlling our culture and people's discovery of it," Wilson said, noting that YouTube has not responded to his appeals and the company is preventing others from hearing his message.
During the conference, Wilson explained that the blueprints for his gun made mostly from 3D-printed components will be available for sale online and that he will be sharing the blueprints over email, and then was answering the questions for the rest of the conference.
Free Beacon also posted an email from YouTube Team to Wilson’s company. "As you may know, our Community Guidelines describe which content we allow—and don't allow—on YouTube," the email said, "Your video Cody Wilson—Press Conference—Defense Distributed—8-28-2018 was flagged to us for review. Upon review, we've determined that it violates our guidelines and we’ve removed it from YouTube."
YouTube spokesperson, refused to be identified, reportedly said that the removal is caused by the recent updates to policy enforcement guidelines. “In March, we notified creators of planned updates around content facilitating the sale or manufacture of firearms and their accessories, giving them several months to review their accounts and remove violative content,” he said, claiming that the video included a link to DefCad.com – a website which sells the blueprints. According to a spokesperson, YouTube is no longer allows content which facilitates sales of the firearms, their manufacture or links to the websites selling firearms.
READ MORE: Alex Jones, InfoWars Permanently Banned from Twitter, Periscope
This is not the first time media companies trying to prevent public sales of the plastic gun blueprints. Facebook had recently banned content discussing websites hosting the same blueprints Wilson wants to publish. Amazon banned CodeIsFreeSpeech.com for web hosting and also banned a book containing the raw code for Wilson’s gun design from sale through the Amazon website.