YouTube is known for its monetization policy with content creators where you get paid a percentage of the ad revenue the site gets. This has led to some people earn a living from YouTube and a recent change by the company has led them to complain about the issue.
The whole furore is led by one Philip DeFranco published a video on YouTube called “YouTube Is Shutting Down My Channel and I’m Not Sure What To Do” which has become quite popular and it is nearing over
He even posted about this issue on his Twitter account.
Seems like @Youtube will be stripping most of my advertising from now on. Oh well.
I'm not going to censor myself. pic.twitter.com/a9upZh6eTY
— Philip DeFranco (@PhillyD) August 31, 2016
The most contentious issue he had was the one highlighted in red which says “controversial or sensitive subjects an events, including subjects related to war, political conflicts, natural disasters and tragedies, even if graphic imagery is not shown.” He usually posts what was happening in the news and this affects him directly.
Update: At least 12 more of my videos have been hit and I'm nowhere near done. This might be part of the reason. Wow pic.twitter.com/2i6msEMv7M
— Philip DeFranco (@PhillyD) August 31, 2016
The YouTube team responded to his claims on Twitter where they iterated that there was no policy change but an improved notification process.
@PhillyD No policy change here; just an improved notification process to ensure creators can appeal: https://t.co/mlfpbBvacg
— Team YouTube (@TeamYouTube) September 1, 2016
But…if you check this notice this channel got, you will understand that the policy change is all about the relationship about the content of the video and being advertiser friendly.
The Vlogbrothers probably got the most hilarious demonetization notice. Shows the variety of content affected. pic.twitter.com/lRrGkN5HSY
— Hank Green (@hankgreen) September 1, 2016
This is the end game of allowing all your content to be swallowed up by social media ghettos. #YouTubeIsOverParty pic.twitter.com/ckSNa8YUmj
— Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet) September 1, 2016
This situation led people to call out on YouTube on Twitter and it brought about the creation of a hashtag #YouTubeIsOverParty where they made fun of the future of the largest online video repository.
YouTube content (2016) #YouTubeIsOverParty pic.twitter.com/CyIEZXGHN0
— LocalMemeStealer |-/ (@_RawrxD_) September 1, 2016
Meanwhile at Youtube… #YouTubeIsOverParty pic.twitter.com/YosILhquYv
— Sarobi (@Sarobi) September 2, 2016
#YouTubeIsOverParty auto-corrects to a fake hashtag.
Google/YouTube/Twitter coordinating on censorship. pic.twitter.com/wNqr5lLfRG
— Mike Cernovich (@Cernovich) September 2, 2016
waiting for a new website to replace YouTube #YouTubeIsOverParty pic.twitter.com/K45VW37e7F
— sun kissed (@xoshannxn) September 1, 2016
I'M SCREAMING 😂 #YouTubeIsOverParty pic.twitter.com/l1vnYMOfbv
— isra (@itsisraelsolano) September 1, 2016
Shane Dawson: So today we're gonna talk about conspiracy theor-
Youtube: pic.twitter.com/QFTLN9imtW
— jess (@kingstyIesrises) September 1, 2016
Well this move is not popular with creators and viewers alike and might trigger them to move to other platforms that offer them incentives. As an example, Twitter recently launched such an initiative where they are willing to give creators a bigger percentage of the ad revenue when compared to YouTube.
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