Google-owned video hosting platform YouTube will start cracking down on channels and accounts which aren’t “commercially viable.”
On Saturday, the company revealed it will roll out new Terms of Service (ToS) on December 10, giving YouTube the “sole discretion” to terminate access to the platform if accounts or videos may affect its bottom line.
“YouTube may terminate your access, or your Google account’s access to all or part of the Service if YouTube believes, in its sole discretion, that provision of the Service to you is no longer commercially viable,” the company wrote in a statement.
“YouTube is under no obligation to host or serve content,” reads another section of the policy.
The announcement sent waves of panic throughout the web, as many understood the terms to be a direct threat towards channels that espouse the wrong points of view.
“The terms could be a way for YouTube to remove channels that promote hate speech, conspiracy theories, or harmful messages whose content isn’t extreme enough to warrant an outright ban, as these are unlikely to be commercially viable,” wrote TechSpot’s Rob Thubron. “But if this is the case, it needs to be clearly explained.”
On social media, the updated ToS was taken as writing on the wall that a new purge is on its way, after the company spent much of the past two years demonetizing content from popular channels.
YouTube is probably over.
It’s been a lot of small steps, but this is the end.
As of December 10th, Youtube will delete channels that are “no longer commercially viable.”
How could a channel that’s demonetized be “commercially viable”?
“Broadcast yourself” is finished. pic.twitter.com/5x4fuYD2Te
— Ford Fischer (@FordFischer) November 10, 2019
In their new terms of service @YouTube can delete accounts they no longer find commercially viable
Now we better understand why they demonetize content they disagree with politically
AKA demonetization is a precursor to being banned off the platformhttps://t.co/gfO6QEarhE
— Elijah Schaffer (@ElijahSchaffer) November 11, 2019
Well these aren't the business terms current partners signed onto… https://t.co/qvkQrIO2er
— Steven Crowder (@scrowder) November 11, 2019
Not sure if the new TOS from YouTube will put my channel at risk, that being, a channel can be "terminated" if not "commercially viable”, so I'd follow on ALL the social media places In the vod descriptions just in case. New TOS takes place Dec.10th. Wish me luck 🙁 pic.twitter.com/YhCC3d0T3C
— : iLL WiLL PrEss : (@jimathers) November 10, 2019
YouTube, creators want to feel safe on your platform. If they don't, they'll jump to an alternative as soon as one pops up that looks viable.
With your new ToS, creators feel even less safe on your platform.
— Jay Exci (@JayExci) November 11, 2019
YouTube has new Terms Of Service on December 10th. This basically says that if channels don't make enough money, THEY WILL POSSIBLY TERMINATE THEM!!!
Looks like I fought to the very end but now I may be close to losing my livelihood, losing my passion, my audience and my… pic.twitter.com/P74uQe8jpW
— Christian Maracle (@MaracleMan) November 9, 2019
Youtube Pre-2020: Oh wow I made 10 bucks off ads. Neat
Youtube Post-2020: "Your account has been suspended and your gmail deleted for not being commercially viable. You are also being fined 42,000 dollars for uploading "Let's Play Resident Evil Part 8" under COPPA"— Mister AntiBully (@MisterAntiBully) November 8, 2019
In a statement to The Verge, YouTube claimed it updated the ToS “in order to make them easier to read and to ensure they’re up to date.”
“We’re not changing the way our products work, how we collect or process data, or any of your settings,” YouTube told The Verge.
The Verge claims YouTube’s updated terms give them “the ‘sole discretion’ to terminate an account, whereas before it said that YouTube must ‘reasonably believe’ it should do so.”
The company tried to tamp down speculation and growing outrage on Twitter, claiming the new ToS is being misinterpreted.
To clarify, there are no new rights in our ToS to terminate an account bc it’s not making money. As before, we may discontinue certain YouTube features or parts of the service, for ex., if they're outdated or have low usage. This does not impact creators/viewers in any new ways.
— TeamYouTube (@TeamYouTube) November 11, 2019
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