The good news is that both YouTube and Twitch eventually removed Sneako's microphone. The bad news is that it took them far longer than it should have taken, long enough for him to retain influence with kids even when he had to seek out an alternative stage. Major social media companies haven't done great work enforcing their own policies about hate speech. Partly, that's because the work isn't easy. But in cases like this when the lines are bright and clear, they often seem to waver. I don't know if that's because they fear controversy or they fear loss of profitable traffic. Possibly, it's a combination.