By Samannay Biswas
Copyright timesnownews
YouTube, owned by Google’s parent company Alphabet, has agreed to pay $24.5 million to settle a lawsuit filed by US President Donald Trump over the suspension of his account in the aftermath of the January 6, 2021 Capitol attack. The settlement, disclosed in a federal court filing in California on Monday, makes YouTube the latest major technology company to resolve legal disputes with Trump stemming from his mass deplatforming by Big Tech firms after the Capitol riot. Breakdown of the settlement $22 million will go to Trump’s Trust for the National Mall, a nonprofit that supports projects such as the planned White House State Ballroom construction.An additional $2.5 million will be distributed to allied conservative organizations, including the American Conservative Union.Alphabet did not comment on the settlement, while Trump’s legal team hailed it as another victory in what they call an “ongoing fight against Big Tech censorship.” Why Trump sued YouTube Trump was suspended from YouTube on January 12, 2021, days after the Capitol violence, with the platform citing “concerns about the ongoing potential for violence.” His account remained frozen for more than two years, only being restored in 2023. In his lawsuit, Trump accused YouTube and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai of wrongful censorship, arguing that his suspension was based on “broad, vague and ever-shifting standards.” He also claimed that the ban violated his rights and unfairly silenced millions of his supporters. Legal experts, however, noted that Trump’s First Amendment arguments were weak because the US Constitution restricts government censorship, not private companies. Broader context: Trump vs Big Tech The YouTube settlement follows a pattern: Meta (Facebook/Instagram) paid $25 million in January to settle Trump’s complaint, with most funds earmarked for his future presidential library.X (formerly Twitter) settled in February for about $10 million.Paramount Global reportedly agreed to a $16 million settlement earlier this year in a separate case brought by Trump. Observers say many of these settlements are not purely about legal merit but about corporate pragmatism, with Big Tech firms wary of being caught in the crosshairs of Trump’s administration as it weighs antitrust actions and new tech regulations. The deal comes just a week before a scheduled October 6 hearing before US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland, California. Legal analysts suggest Alphabet may have sought to avoid a protracted trial that could fuel political controversy at a time when the company is also fighting a Justice Department antitrust case targeting its ad technology business. What it means For Trump: Another symbolic win in his ongoing battles with Big Tech, giving him political ammunition ahead of the 2026 midterms.For Alphabet: A relatively small payout compared to its $3 trillion market value, but one that closes a politically sensitive chapter.For the tech industry: A reminder of how companies are increasingly choosing settlements over legal showdowns with Trump, whose presidency continues to shape regulatory risks for Silicon Valley.