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		</div><p>YouTube says it disabled more than 200 videos this week that appeared to be part of a coordinated effort to spread misinformation about the ongoing protests in Hong Kong.</p>
<p>The video removals come just days after Twitter said it had suspended more than 200,000 accounts it linked to a Chinese government influence campaign against the protests.</p>
<p>Facebook also said it had suspended accounts and removed pages after being notified by Twitter.</p>
<p>Google, which owns YouTube, did not explicitly implicate the Chinese government but said the videos were related to the similar disclosures from Facebook and Twitter.</p>
<p>Social media companies have faced criticism about the spread of misinformation on their sites and have taken actions to combat the spread in recent months.</p>
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