While the video has been up for weeks, on Saturday, Villa tweeted that YouTube took her video down, which she re-uploaded about an hour later and tweeted, “I refuse to be silenced.”
The singer later tweeted a letter she received from YouTube informing her that the streaming site received a complaint and she had 48 hours to edit the video or it would be removed again.
Villa argued that she had written consent from every person in the video, however, per the letter, YouTube claimed “we cannot accept or review agreements granting consent before the video was uploaded,” and added that the video can still be removed.
While the complaint was once “nameless,” YouTube eventually revealed to Villa the time stamp of the video that allegedly violated its privacy policy and she blurred the woman's face
http://ijr.com/the-declaration/2017/08/958536-joy-villa-given-48-ho...
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