Following the recent backlash from the community after the company took its own sweet time to react to the first offensive Logan Paul video, YouTube has now announced new policy changes to punish the offensive content. Paul posted another video featuring abuse of dead animals, which resulted in a suspension of advertising revenue on his account.
Earlier this month, Susan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube, revealed that one of the company's goal for 2018 was to create clear policies to penalize channels who did "something great that causes significant harm" to the community.
As per the updated policies, YouTube will now remove monetization options on videos, especially access to advertising programs, that can cause the potential to cause irreversible harm to the community.
In a blog post concerning the matter, Ariel Bardin, VP of Product Management at YouTube, wrote:
"We've long had a set of community guidelines for what the creators can share on our platform and a set of ad-friendly guidelines for what they can monetize. We also have a system of strikes we use to enforce those guidelines which can ultimately result in a channel's termination ... but in very rare cases, we can only use more quickly and effectively than current current system of guidelines and strikes. "
Here's the full list of changes outlined by the spread of offensive content on the platform:
Premium Monetization Programs, Promotion and Content Development Partnerships: YouTube may remove a channel from Google Preferred and also suspend, cancel or remove a creator's YouTube original.
Monetization and Creator Support Privileges: YouTube may also suspend a channel's ability to serve ads, ability to earn a revenue and potentially remove a YouTube channel from YouTube Partners Program, including revoking creator support and access to YouTube Spaces.
Video Recommendations: The channel will be algorithmically barred from recommended on YouTube, which is the largest driver of video traffic on the platform.
In his blog post, Bardin also owned up to the company's lack of promptness while handling videos that breached its policies.
He said, "In the past, we felt our responses to some of these situations were slow and did not always address our broader community's concerns." The new policy changes are a way to address that and streamline the response process, make quick decisions about objectionable content, and communicate to them the consequences effectively.

No comments:
Post a Comment