youtube.jpg

Lots of businesses block certain website from being viewed on their network. Porn is an obvious target, but so are time-wasting sites and those that chew up a large chunk of bandwidth. That often means no YouTube, Pandora, or similar outlets that stream video and audio.

This counts for police stations, too. You don’t want your friendly local officer sitting at his desk watching booty videos on YouTube or an illegal stream of NCAA basketball while he should be fighting crime.

Unless, of course, that crime allegedly occurred on YouTube.

Vince Grzegorek has been with Scene since 2007 and editor-in-chief since 2012. He previously worked at Discount Drug Mart and Texas Roadhouse.

One reply on “Cops Unable to Investigate YouTube Threat Because Police Station Blocks YouTube”

  1. Yeah like they dont have tech guy who could unblock it for special circumstances, i mean, who blocked it in first place, they could unblock if need be. what a crock

Comments are closed.