But where is that "fine line"? It is found in laws. If the authors of the videos from that platform went in person to New York, Berlin or Tel Aviv and gave a public lecture entitled "The Pure Evil of the Jews" or "Treblinka Was not a Death Camp", what would happen? They would be immediately arrested, convicted and punished according to the law. Because it's a crime. Therefore, should such lectures be tolerated online? What is the difference if they commit the crime live or online?
The propaganda television of the brutal Russian aggressor, state-owned RT, freely publishes its monstrous broadcasts there, in which it threatens the entire world with nuclear destruction and calculates how many seconds it takes for Russian missiles to completely destroy London. It is terrorism, regardless of whether it is committed live or via a web service.
Regarding the LGBT community, that platform publishes videos that talk about what Vladimir Putin thinks about LGBT people! There are videos there advocating the death penalty for gays and defenders of Ukraine, and they also posted a video titled: "Headquarters of gays, lesbians and satanists was found in Mariupol"! Heavens!
As I said, there should be no tolerance for intolerance. Freedom of speech should never be exercised at the expense of the freedom (or life) of another. No one who agrees with Nazism, racism or oppression (in real life or online, whatever) should get away with impunity. It is unacceptable to constantly repeat that "censorship is not a solution". No, it's not: prison is the solution for such acts!
It is not acceptable in the modern world to debate whether Nazism is positive and whether Jews, homosexuals and people of other races should be killed. That is not up for debate. And the one who wants to discuss it should be sanctioned. It is wrong (and also a criminal act) to publicly promote such insane views. Such "authors" should not only be censored, but criminal proceedings should be carried out against them and they should be condemned according to the law.
Freedom of speech is one thing, but promoting Nazism, Russian terrorism and intolerance is quite another. What they publish are serious crimes. A crime is a crime, whether it is committed in real life or on the Internet. Inciting such crimes, which many of the videos on this platform undoubtedly represent, is also a crime.