Hello @TeamYouTube
My channel, HordFast, which has almost 90,000 subscribers, has been demonetized for about 120 days now. https://t.co/IxRVUwSjx2
During that time, I've worked hard to improve my content by moving away from repetitive templates and making each video more unique in both editing and presentation.
I also want to clarify that my content has always been researched, written, edited, and produced by me. While I do use TTS voice-overs because I'm not very fluent in spoken English, every script is written by me, and all of the ideas, research, editing, and overall production are entirely my own.
At the same time, I understand that many of my older videos relied too heavily on repetitive templates, and that's one of the main things I've been working to improve over the past few months. My newer content is significantly different in terms of editing, presentation, and overall quality, and I actively try to make each video visually distinct rather than relying on the same template over and over again.
My channel is already eligible to reapply for monetization, but I'm hesitant because another rejection would mean waiting another 90 days. Since my channel still contains a large archive of older videos, I'm concerned that an automated review may not fully reflect the improvements I've made over the past 120 days. That's why I'm hoping for a fair human review before I submit my reapplication.
I've seen creators with similar issues, including channels with thousands of videos and heavily template-based content, regain monetization without having to remove their entire archive. That's one of the reasons I'm unsure what level of changes is actually expected in my case.
My channel has over 1,000 videos, and removing every video that uses my old format would have a massive impact on the channel I've spent years building. It could also significantly affect my watch time, engagement, and the overall performance of the channel.
Do I really need to remove every video that uses my previous template-based format? I've seen creators in similar situations regain monetization after removing only a portion of their older videos rather than deleting everything, which is why I'm unsure what's expected in my case.
I'm genuinely trying to improve and follow the policies. I'm not asking for special treatment, only a fair human review and some guidance before I submit my reapplication.
Thank you for your time. #YouTube #Creators #Monetization #YouTubePartnerProgram #YPP @YouTubeCreators@YouTube
Hello @TeamYouTube
My channel, HordFast, which has almost 90,000 subscribers, has been demonetized for about 120 days now. https://t.co/IxRVUwSjx2
During that time, I've worked hard to improve my content by moving away from repetitive templates and making each video more unique in both editing and presentation.
I also want to clarify that my content has always been researched, written, edited, and produced by me. While I do use TTS voice-overs because I'm not very fluent in spoken English, every script is written by me, and all of the ideas, research, editing, and overall production are entirely my own.
At the same time, I understand that many of my older videos relied too heavily on repetitive templates, and that's one of the main things I've been working to improve over the past few months. My newer content is significantly different in terms of editing, presentation, and overall quality, and I actively try to make each video visually distinct rather than relying on the same template over and over again.
My channel is already eligible to reapply for monetization, but I'm hesitant because another rejection would mean waiting another 90 days. Since my channel still contains a large archive of older videos, I'm concerned that an automated review may not fully reflect the improvements I've made over the past 120 days. That's why I'm hoping for a fair human review before I submit my reapplication.
I've seen creators with similar issues, including channels with thousands of videos and heavily template-based content, regain monetization without having to remove their entire archive. That's one of the reasons I'm unsure what level of changes is actually expected in my case.
My channel has over 1,000 videos, and removing every video that uses my old format would have a massive impact on the channel I've spent years building. It could also significantly affect my watch time, engagement, and the overall performance of the channel.
Do I really need to remove every video that uses my previous template-based format? I've seen creators in similar situations regain monetization after removing only a portion of their older videos rather than deleting everything, which is why I'm unsure what's expected in my case.
I'm genuinely trying to improve and follow the policies. I'm not asking for special treatment, only a fair human review and some guidance before I submit my reapplication.
Thank you for your time. #YouTube #Creators #Monetization #YouTubePartnerProgram #YPP @YouTubeCreators@YouTube
@TeamYouTube YouTube, this seems like a generic response and doesn't really address my question. I'm simply asking for a fair human review and some guidance before I submit my reapplication.