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YouTube has been grappling with a serious problem for a long time, poor and spam videos made with the help of AI. These ...
YouTube will restrict monetisation for low-effort AI videos starting July 15. Mass-produced content, clones, and undisclosed ...
YouTube’s new monetisation policy, effective July 15, 2025, targets mass-produced, AI-generated, and low-effort content lacking originality. While reaction and clip channels remain allowed, they must ...
YouTube is updating its monetization policy from July 15, 2025, targeting mass-produced, repetitive, and low-effort content.
YouTube has announced changes to its monetisation rules under the YouTube Partner Program (YPP). The implementation will start from July 15, where creators who upload repetitive, copied videos or mass ...
YouTube will enforce new rules from 15 July, ending monetisation for low-effort AI content. Creators must now prioritise ...
YouTube will demonetise mass-produced or inauthentic content, signalling a major shift towards originality and human input.
This means that even if a channel meets the basic eligibility thresholds for the YouTube Partner Program—either 1,000 ...
YouTube has announced a new update to further stop creators from making money with “inauthentic” content posted to the ...
YouTube has confirmed that there are no changes to its “reused content” policy, which continues to allow for the monetisation ...
The exact policy language itself has not yet been released, but a page on YouTube’s Help documentation explains that creators have always been required to upload “original” and “authentic” content.
YouTube is gearing up to take action against “mass-produced,” “repetitious,” and “inauthentic” content starting July 15.