BurntToShreds wrote:
Well maybe if the site's biggest creators were willing to utilize fact-laden videos about what this policy actually is and the problems surrounding it to ask their communities to put pressure on YouTube to become more consistent and user-friendly (improve automated systems, increase human presence for checking appeals on strikes and other things, rework the appeals processes in general to make them speedier), then things could move forward. As it stands right now, they seem more interested in riling people up so they can grab those juicy views and subs. TotalBiscuit's spending the weekend at PAX West so sadly he won't have a video about this up until next week. Shame, that; he's often the only adult in the room when everybody else goes on their whole "YouTube is ruined!" shpiels.
Many of the people affected have been laying out the guidelines in videos and twitter, but the problem stems from how vague the guidelines are and how hard it is to get a straight answer from YouTube. With how many people are having to appeal their videos, its clear not even Youtube is sure what coinstitues a violation and is just opting for the bot-run nuclear approch, shoot first ask questions later. Calling people immature and attention whoring for being upset about Youtubes clearly broken and overly heavy handed attempt at enforcement is in itself immature. Youre both condeming them for riling up their viewers and garnering their attention for their problems and at the same time saying they should rile up their fans and pressure Youtube because of their problems.