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Youtubers Seeing Red After Recent Strategy Variations:::










If you aren’t an devoted YouTuber, then you probably haven’t noticed much in the way of changes that have happened on the video streaming site. On the other hand, if you are someone who is trying to gain internet fame and the advertising dollars that go along with it , then balances are you have probably come across a headache lately.
According to the new rules, YouTube will no longer permit its users to link to their own websites within the videos “”end card”” or the last part of the video unless that video becomes 10,000 views. That means most startups, small businesses, Patreons, and other supporters trying to promote their brands are at a huge drawback getting viewers to their website.
Perhaps one of the best things about YouTube was how anyone could use it to put themselves or their brands out there and attract consideration. Now  not only does your video need to hit the magic 10000 views number, the account owner must also sign up for the YouTube Partner Program which controls the content of the related videos.
YouTube was criticized earlier this year when they started deleting content that it considered “”hate speech”” and that “disturbs the terms of service.” These videos were overwhelmingly related to the conservative right, and it was those users who believe they are being separated against.
The move to remove monetization from these videos came in August after Amazon, Coca-Cola, and Microsoft pulled their ads from YouTube over complaints that hate speech and other inflammatory videos were running alongside ads for their products and they blame youtube for it.
This was a rude awakening for those who relied on the cash-in from video monetization for their income, especially for those who used to enjoy the flexibility of a free speech medium to make money voicing their views  ones shared with its right wing fanbase.
There is a difference between the free expression which lives on YouTube and the content that brands have told us they want to advertise against,” a YouTube spokesman detailed. “Giving advertisers a choice means giving them a choice not to run ads on sensitive content.”
YouTube is not a free speech supporter website, it’s a money earning website, and the advertisers’ needs come before the users. That’s true of most media platforms that want to make money. And since YouTube’s paid service YouTube RED came out, maybe they don’t need to rely on the advertising dollars coming from these videos like they used to.

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