YouTube's new policy for creators allows more swearing
YouTube has updated its advertiser-friendly guidelines, and it now allows creators to retain full ad revenue even if their videos contain strong profanities. YouTube's Head of Monetization Policy Experience confirmed the change in a video posted to the Creator Insider channel. Creators are now allowed to use strong profanities in the first seven seconds of their videos while still retaining full monetization. As the video explains, the new rules “align with broadcast standards” and "advertisers expected ads on YouTube to have distance between profanity and the ad that just served”. The...
YouTube has updated its advertiser-friendly guidelines, and it now allows creators to retain full ad revenue even if their videos contain strong profanities. YouTube's Head of Monetization Policy Experience confirmed the change in a video posted to the Creator Insider channel. Creators are now allowed to use strong profanities in the first seven seconds of their videos while still retaining full monetization. As the video explains, the new rules “align with broadcast standards” and "advertisers expected ads on YouTube to have distance between profanity and the ad that just served”. The...
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