CBS cannot contain the online spread of a ā60 Minutesā segment that its editor-in-chief, Bari Weiss, tried to block from airing.
The episode, āInside CECOT,ā featured testimonies from US deportees who were tortured or suffered physical or sexual abuse at a notorious Salvadoran prison, the Center for the Confinement of Terrorism. āWelcome to hell,ā one former inmate was told upon arriving, the segment reported, while also highlighting a clip of Donald Trump praising CECOT and its leadership for āgreat facilities, very strong facilities, and they donāt play games.ā
Weiss controversially pulled the segment on Monday, claiming it could not air in the US because it lacked critical voices, as no Trump officials were interviewed. She claimed that the segment ādid not advance the ballā and merely echoed othersā reporting, NBC News reported. Her plan was to air the segment when it was āready,ā insisting that holding stories āfor whatever reasonā happens āevery day in every newsroom.ā
But Weiss apparently did not realize that the āInside CECOTā would still stream in Canada, giving the public a chance to view the segment as reporters had intended.
Critics accusing CBS of censoring the story quickly shared the segment online Monday after discovering that it was available on the Global TV app. Using a VPN to connect to the app with a Canadian IP address was all it took to override Weissā block in the US, as 404 Media reported the segment was uploaded to āto a variety of file sharing sites and services, including iCloud, Mega, and as a torrent,ā including on the recently revived file-sharing service LimeWire. Itās currently also available to stream on the Internet Archive, where one reviewer largely summed up the publicās response so far, writing, ācannot believe this was pulled, not a dang thing wrong with this segment except it shows truth.ā
ā¦
As Americans scrambled to share the āInside CECOTā story, assuming that CBS would be working in the background to pull down uploads, a once-blacklisted tool from the early 2000s became a reliable way to keep the broadcast online.
On Reddit, users shared links to a LimeWire torrent, prompting chuckles from people surprised to see the peer-to-peer service best known for infecting parentsā computers with viruses in the 2000s suddenly revived in 2025 to skirt feared US government censorship.
āYo what,ā one user joked, highlighting only the word āLimeWire.ā Another user, ironically using the LimeWire logo as a profile picture, responded, āman, who knew my nostalgia prof pic would become relevant again, WTF.ā



Meanwhile those of us still using irc just sitting here whistling a merry tune.
to the tune of XDCC