YouTube loosens the profanity rules for monetized videos
YouTube tweaks blasphemous rules to allow creators to swear on the video to monetize the video if it is blasphemed in the first 7 seconds of the video.
In November 2022, YouTube changed rules to create a creator who swears words. The first 8-15 seconds will be potential It is not covered by advertising revenue. After much backlash, the company changed the rules again in March 2023, Videos like this are eligible for limited advertising revenueunless you use blasphemy in most of the videos.
Conor Kavanagh, YouTube’s head of monetization, who announced the latest changes, said in a video later Tuesday that the changes two years ago were made to line up YouTube videos with broadcast standards.
“Incorporating these guidelines and aligning with broadcast standards, advertisers expected that YouTube ads would distance themselves from the ads they offered and served. These expectations have changed.
He noted that if creators use medium or strong oaths in titles or thumbnails, their videos may be limited in monetization.