Dave Rubin, host of The Rubin Report, says YouTube demonetized his two-and-a-half hour video interview with conservative pundit Ben Shapiro.
Another video, titled “2018: Outrage, Anger, and Unusual Alliances” lost monetization, too, he tweeted. Rubin said that even if YouTube reversed the decision, this would still eat into his income potential. He used this issue to raise funds.
When Law&Crime reached out for comment, a YouTube spokesperson discussed their recent attempts to fix the demonetization problem.
“Over the last few months, we’ve used the signals from creator appeals to help improve the machine learning technology that determines whether a video is suitable for ads,” said an email statement. “Our recent update, for example, reduced the number of videos receiving limited ads by 30%. We know it’s important to get this right, and it’s a huge focus for our teams.”
The company reached out to Rubin on Twitter Thursday afternoon. They said it seemed like he successfully appealed.
Rubin’s complaint fits numerous others levied against the platform. Users said that many videos are unfairly demonetized. It’s all about that algorithm. An automated process, not a real person, plays a huge role in deciding which videos can be monetized. Clips deemed “not suitable for most advertisers” get limited-to-no-ad revenue because content got auto-flagged. Users can file for a human to review the algorithm’s decision.
This has been a running problem for the site. Some users have taken to calling this controversy the “adpocalypse.” Last May, indie wrestling promotion WCPW canceled tapings because demonetization ate into income from their YouTube channel. Other wrestling channels reported similar problems, as did users covering mental health issues. Demonetization also hit hosts with channels covering LGBT themes. For example, a co-host of the gaming channel Geek Remix complained in September that putting the word “lesbian” in a title led to demonetization. The host, who goes online by the name Mari, said she contacted YouTube about this, but the customer service rep had no idea why it happened.
YouTube rolled out an update last October, promising, to reduce the number of demonetized videos. They promised that experience would make their algorithm accurate.
In August, we launched the new monetization icons and appeals process so that you would have more transparency into how each and every video on your channel is monetizing. This system uses machine learning to apply a green icon (fully monetized) or a yellow icon (limited or no ads) to your videos and offers you the ability to appeal if you think a video is misclassified. Appeals receive a human review and those decisions help the system get smarter over time.
Complaints continue to pop up. Technology reviewer Ben Schmanke said that YouTube demonetized a cell phone comparison video in November.
YouTube “said this shouldn’t happen, but obviously it keeps happening,” Schmanke told The Verge in a November interview. “Overnight I gained a good 10,000 or 20,000 views, so that’s lost money on both my part and their part.”
Facebook was accused in 2016 of suppressing conservative news stories from the Trending News section. The company denied this.
[Screengrab via The Rubin Report]