YouTube will no longer limit ads on videos that drop the f-bomb early
3 months ago
5
YouTube has changed its ad guideline policy surrounding swear words, allowing creators a bit more freedom than before. In a video announcement, YouTube's head of monetization, Conor Kavanagh, said that videos containing stronger profanity such as f-bombs in the first seven seconds are now eligible for full monetization. In 2022, YouTube introduced a policy that would flag videos using profane language in the first several seconds as ineligible for advertising. It relaxed that rule a bit in 2023. Videos containing moderate profanity, such as "asshole" or "bitch," in the first seven seconds no longer faced restrictions. Those with strong profanity were only eligible to get limited ad revenue. Now, those videos can be fully monetized.
In his announcement, Kavanagh explained that YouTube introduced it...
NEWS.SP1.RO is an automatic news aggregator. In each article, taken over by NEWS.SP1.RO with maximum 500 characters from the original article, the source name and hyperlink to the source are specified.
The acquisition of information aims to promote and facilitate access to information, in compliance with intellectual property rights, in accordance with the terms and conditions of the source.
If you are the owner of the content and do not wish to publish your materials, please contact us by email at [email protected] and the content will be deleted as soon as possible.