WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

873

> YouTube, in its latest update to the site’s Terms of Service, has stated that it would start running advertisements on videos that are not actually a part of the YouTube Partner Program (YPP), meaning that it’s going to make money off of users’ content without sharing any of the revenue with them.

> The new section pertaining to the update says that the “right to monetize your Content on the Service (and such monetization may include displaying ads on or within Content or charging users a fee for access)” would be provided to the users. That being said, the platform also stated that doing so would not “entitle” creators to any payments.

> YouTube said that it would “begin slowly rolling out ads on a limited number of videos from channels not in YPP.”

>> YouTube, in its latest update to the site’s Terms of Service, has stated that it would start running advertisements on videos that are not actually a part of the YouTube Partner Program (YPP), meaning that it’s going to make money off of users’ content without sharing any of the revenue with them. >> The new section pertaining to the update says that the “right to monetize your Content on the Service (and such monetization may include displaying ads on or within Content or charging users a fee for access)” would be provided to the users. That being said, the platform also stated that doing so would not “entitle” creators to any payments. >> YouTube said that it would “begin slowly rolling out ads on a limited number of videos from channels not in YPP.”

(post is archived)