The Rabbit Hole By Adeline Atlas (SOS: School Of Soul)
Jan 28, 2026
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BitChute launched in 2017 as a direct response to YouTube’s censorship. Its core architecture is peer-to-peer—originally modeled after torrent technology—so content is not stored on centralized servers. This makes deplatforming more difficult. BitChute has earned a reputation for radical openness. Topics banned elsewhere—vaccine skepticism, globalist governance, exposés on brands, products and industries—exist here without algorithmic suppression. That freedom, however, comes with tradeoffs. The interface is clunky, the platform underfunded, and moderation minimal. Users will encounter content that ranges from serious investigative work to inflammatory speculation. Discernment is essential. The value of BitChute is not polish. It’s raw access.