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With the detailed Monetization Guide, YouTube tries to become more transparent

YouTube has provided more clarity, in a collapseness of its Monetization Guidelines, published in May, which videos can and can not run ads, including videos which fall under hateful content.
 
YouTube provides the option to publish on a video with "hateful material" which will allow advertisements to run on news video on subjects like homophobia, on "contents" like video-music that use "hateful language" which "comedic material that involves witches in a non-hurtful way at the expense of oppressed groups."
 
The clarification appears to be a consequence of an event that took place in June when right-wing Youtuber Steven Crowder argued for some of his homophobic remarks on Carlos Maza, the former Vox hosts and YouTube creator, as "harmless ribbing." Youtube executive team decided that comments did not violate rules requiring video capturing, but Crowder lost his ability to monetize his chains
 
YouTube has introduced a number of content changes and marketing guidelines. Not only are the current content standards forbidden for Crowder, but they also specifically fall into the "non-eligible for ads" portion of the Monetarization Manual on YouTube.
 
The more detailed guidelines are intended to help developers to more clearly understand content types that advertisers may not wish to oppose, "writes YouTube.
 
Creators often are confused because they can't ads on certain videos they think are promoting and creating a reverse between YouTube and the community. The comprehensive list seems like another effort to be more straightforward in YouTube's search.
 
"We don't know what you can make," reads the website. The website. "All creators on Youtube are exceptional and contribute to YouTube's vitality."
 
There is also confusion when YouTubers can advertise videos on sensitive topics , especially news stories. Sensitive topics cover wars, suicides and terrorist attacks on YouTube.
 
Many videos focusing on a sensitive subject can not be advertised, but Google considers news organizations and channels as news sources sometimes exempt.
 
YouTube now says that "fluent references" to sensitive subjects made by creators in videos are OK — a video that refers to sensitive subjects but is probably not the focus of interest for advertisers, for example.
The guidelines from YouTube say that "an event must be relatively new if it is to be regarded as a sensitive event such as the Mosque Shooting in New Zealand."
 
Many of the guidelines outlined on publicity are quite evident. Sexually suggestive videos, anything with extreme profanity, and anything that glorifies violent acts, including injuries leading to death, can not be marketed.
 
Certain content that is not considered advertisingable is often barred from YouTube by the company's content instructions — that means creators don't have the ability to upload and monetize the video in general.
 
Pornography is not permitted on YouTube and also listed in advertising as a type of content.

 






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