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posted by martyb on Sunday September 04 2016, @07:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the where-else-could-he-go? dept.

http://www.vox.com/2016/9/2/12746450/youtube-monetization-phil-defranco-leaving-site

Prominent YouTube star Philip DeFranco is known for his candid, often satirical delivery and his willingness to cover everything from celebrity gossip to memes. As his audience has grown, he's won awards for his informal news series and formed partnerships with major platforms like TMZ and SourceFed.

But on August 31, YouTube disabled monetization for at least 12 of DeFranco's videos. The official reason provided to DeFranco was that his content was either not "advertiser-friendly" or contained "graphic content," or "excessive strong language." DeFranco frequently swears in his videos, and regularly refers to his followers as "Beautiful Bastards." The demonetization means DeFranco will not be able to run ads (read: make money from ads) on any of those videos, and also means his channel is considered to be in violation of YouTube's community guidelines.

"I've seen channels dinged now for talking about depression and anti-bullying. And I've also seen channels like CNN include footage of a Syrian boy covered in blood, after his house was reportedly bombed, and right next to the video is a nice little ad for sneakers. So you get the question, 'Why me and not them?'" he said.

DeFranco pointed out that internet fame doesn't lead to a sustainable full-time income for the vast majority of "celebrities." If YouTube starts cracking down on content for not being "ad-friendly" enough, it could hurt these middle-tier vloggers far worse than a more major figure like DeFranco.


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  • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Monday September 05 2016, @03:25AM

    by Reziac (2489) on Monday September 05 2016, @03:25AM (#397644) Homepage

    Thank you, I had wondered about this.

    It occurs to me that one way to fight back is to remove, or at least make private, any demonetized video -- to eliminate chance viewers that have to be a good portion of Youtube's pay-per-ad revenue. Basically tell them -- we're fine with helping you make money so long as you help us make money in return. We're not fine with our content making you money but getting nothing in return.

    --
    And there is no Alkibiades to come back and save us from ourselves.
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